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AES ee AÀ 
| inthe vicinity of this. plaque 
| MLK. GANDHI 


“was evicted from a first class 
compartment.on the: night of 


7 June 1893 
This incident changed 
thé course of his life 
He took.up the fight 
against.racial oppression 
His active non-violence 
started from that date 


Gandhi in South Africa: 
A Racist or A Liberator? 


Siby K. Joseph 


D 


> 
w 


a 


Foreword 


Ela Gandhi 


Gandhi in South Africa: 
A Racist or A Liberator? 


INSTITUTE OF GANDHIAN STUDIES, WARDHA 


Publications 
1. Essays on Gandhian Thought - Ravindra Varma et al. (2004) 
2. Explorations in Culture of Peace - Siby K. Joseph (ed.) (2006) 
3. Essays on Conflict Resolution - Siby K. Joseph, 
Bharat Mahodaya (eds.) (2007) 
4. Khoj Gandhi Ki - C. S. Dharmadhikari (2008) 
5. Non-violent Struggles of the Twentieth - Siby K. Joseph 
Century: Retrospect and Prospect John Moolakkattu 
Bharat Mahodaya (eds.) (2009) 
6. Contemporary Perspectives on Peace and - Siby K. Joseph, 
Non-violence Bharat Mahodaya (eds.) (2010) 
7. Reflections on Hind Swaraj - Siby K. Joseph, 


Bharat Mahodaya (eds.) (2011) 


8. Gandhi, Environment and Sustainable Future - Siby K. Joseph, 
Bharat Mahodaya (eds.) (2011) 


9. Gandhi Meri Nazar Mein - C. S. Dharmadhikari (2011) 
10. Contextualising Gandhian Thought - Siby K. Joseph (ed.) (2012) 
11. Continuing Relevance of Swadeshi - Siby K. Joseph, 

Bharat Mahodaya (eds.) 2012) 
12. Contemplating Gandhi - C. S. Dharmadhikari 


Translated and Edited by 
Ramchandra Pradhan (2014) 


13. Trusteeship: A Path Less Travelled - Siby K. Joseph, 
Bharat Mahodaya, 
Ramchandra Pradhan (eds.) (2016) 


14. Revisiting Development - Siby K. Joseph, 
Bharat Mahodaya, 
Ramchandra Pradhan (eds.) (2017) 


15. Women Power: A Gandhian Discourse - C. S. Dharmadhikari 
- Translated and Edited by 
Ramchandra Pradhan (2018) 


16. Stree Shakti Vardhini - Suman Bang (2018) 


Gandhi in South Africa: 
A Racist or A Liberator? 


Siby K. Joseph 


INSTITUTE OF GANDHIAN STUDIES, WARDHA 


All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced, 
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by 
any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or 
otherwise, without the prior written permission of the 
publishers. 


The views and opinions expressed in this book are those of the 
authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the 
organizations to which they belong. 


First Published 2019 


© Institute of Gandhian Studies 


ISBN: 978-81-932915-4-2 


Published by Institute of Gandhian Studies, 
Gopuri, Wardha — 442 001 (Maharashtra) 
Price Rs. 150/- 


Printed at Om Laser Printers, 2324, Hudson Lines, 
Kingsway Camp, Delhi — 110 009 


CONTENTS 


Foreword Ela Gandhi 9-13 

Preface Siby K. Joseph 15-20 

Chapter -1 Introduction 21-30 

Chapter-2 Gandhi and Racial Discrimination 31-52 
in South Africa 

Chapter-3 Criticisms against Gandhi in South 53-68 
Africa: An Analysis 

Chapter-4 The Racist Identity of Gandhi: An 69-76 
Assessment 


Chapter-5 Citations of Gandhi by Obadele Kambon 77-99 
with Relevant Text 


Chapter -6 Conclusion 100-104 
Appendix -1 M. K.Gandhi’s written Statement in the 105-109 
Great Trial of 1922 
About the Author 110 


Institute of Gandhian Studies 111 


At the time of writing I never think of what I have said before. 
My aim is not to be consistent with my previous statements on a 
given question; but to be consistent with truth as it may present 
itself to me at a given moment. The result has been that I have 
grown from truth to truth; I have saved my memory an undue 
strain; and what is more, whenever I have been obliged to 
compare my writing even of fifty years ago with the latest, I 
have discovered no inconsistency between the two. But friends 
who observe inconsistency will do well to take the meaning that 
my latest writing may yield unless, of course, they prefer the 
old. But before making the choice they should try to see if there 
is not an underlying and abiding consistency between the two 
seeming inconsistencies. 


M. K. Gandhi 
Harijan, 30-9-1939 


Foreword 


Ela Gandhi 

Gandhi Development Trust 
P.O. Box 477 
Hyper-by-the-sea 

Durban — 4053 

South Africa 


History is about people’s perceptions and because it is 
written long after the subject is no longer able to clarify, correct 
or abrogate conclusions drawn by historians, the subject always 
remains at the mercy of writers. But I believe that a good 
historian should desist from making judgements. 


Truth is important but truth can be distorted by the way 
in which it is presented or by giving a one-sided version, or by 
being simply untruthful. At issue is the question- “Am I writing 
that which I believe to be the absolute truth or am I choosing to 
report selectively to convey a message that I wish to convey?” 
These questions will help to establish a more objective 
approach. The quest for the truth is not an easy task. What 
appears to be the truth to one maybe something else to another. 


Over the ages we have seen how history is presented 
from differing perspectives and unless one reads extensively 
one can be left with a distorted picture. 


In this book Dr Joseph has done extensive research to 
contextualize and to counter some of the conclusions drawn in 
one South African book written by two academics. A book 


10 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


which aroused the wrath of many African people against 
Gandhiji and has been the sole reference point for the raising of 
objections to Gandhiji’s statue being installed in Ghana and 
Malawi. He has been labeled a racist who despised African 
people. 


In the early 20" century Gandhiji cautioned young 
readers in India, 


“Literature, full of the virus of self-indulgence, and served out 
in attractive forms, is flooding our country from the West and 
there is the greatest need for our youth to be on their guard. 
The present is for them an age of transition of ideals and 
ordeals; the one thing needful for the world, its youth and 
particularly the youth of India in this crisis, is Tolstoy’s 
progressive self-restraint, for it alone can lead to true freedom 
for themselves, the country and the world.” ! 

It is always good to be exposed to many perspectives 
before one can make any conclusions. We are all human and as 
such are not infallible. Gandhiji too was human and never 
claimed to be infallible. In fact he claimed all his frailties but 
strangely he never claimed to be a racist, a casteist or being 
Gay. Those are tags given him by some scholars, if one can 
refer to them as such. But certainly drawing from the myriad 
writings of Gandhiji I believe that a person who advocated love 
of all life cannot be racist. 


This book helps to clarify one point very clearly and 
that is that one cannot make conclusions based on quotes, 
stated out of context. It is also essential to verify whether the 


Siby K. Joseph 11 


statement was actually written or stated by the person or 
whether it is imputed to that person. So perhaps reading this 
book one maybe in a better position to contextualize that which 
was written by his critics. However whether a reader would be 
convinced one way or another will be in the end dependent on 
the reader. 


Gandhiji said 

I have taken to journalism not for its sake but merely as an 
aid to what I have conceived to be my mission in life. My 
mission is to teach by example and precept under severe 
restraint the use of matchless weapon of “Satyagraha” 
which is a direct corollary of nonviolence and truth. I am 
anxious, indeed I am impatient, to demonstrate that there is 
no remedy for the many ills of life save that of nonviolence. 
It is a solvent strong enough to melt the stoniest heart. To 
be true to my faith, therefore, I may not write in anger or 
malice. I may not write idly. I may not write merely to 
excite passion. The reader can have no idea of the restraint 
I have to exercise from week to week in the choice of topics 
on my vocabulary. It is a training for me. It enables me to 
peep into myself and to make discoveries of my weaknesses. 
Often my vanity dictates a smart expression or my anger a 
harsh adjective. It is a terrible ordeal but a fine exercise to 
remove these weeds. The reader sees the pages of Young 
India fairly well dressed up and sometimes, with Romain 
Rolland, he is inclined to say “what a fine old man he must 
be”. Well, let the world understand that the fineness is 
carefully and prayerfully cultivated. ? 


12 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Dr Joseph has painfully and carefully gathered 
information and presented it respectfully and without malice, in 
this book to illustrate that Gandhiji may have written some 
words which we today regard as highly insulting but were not 
actually uttered or written in malice. 


This book gives another viewpoint but for the diligent 
reader it is important to gather his or her own information 
which is freely available on the internet and be discerning. 


It is precisely for this reason that I do not wish to extol 
the veracity of this book in the foreword save to say that I 
appreciate the work done and the intention to remedy the 
perceptions created by the other books. 


Dr Joseph has clearly shown that by researching further 
a completely different picture can emerge. I am an ardent 
follower of Gandhiji’s teachings. I try to closely follow his 
teachings, which are important and where there is any doubt I 
decide for myself what to accept and what to reject. But clearly 
those who follow Gandhian teachings the idea of him being 
racist does not resonate with his teachings. Gandhiji never 
propagated hate or prejudices of any kind. These are attributes 
he fought against. 


He went against the wishes of his benefactors when he 
admitted a dalit family into his Ashram in Sabarmati. He 
advocated respect for all jobs no matter how menial, and never 
shirked from performing the most menial tasks. 


While in South Africa when he initially chose to live 
there as a status conscious lawyer he decided to live where 
other lawyers lived and chose a house in Beach Grove. Later in 


Siby K. Joseph 13 


1904 when he decided to shed this life of luxury and vanity and 
live close to nature in a simple home, he chose to relocate to 
Inanda. He had family and friends living in Tongaat who 
offered him land and a place to stay. Instead he chose to live in 
Inanda as a neighbour to Inkosi Isaiah Shembe and hundreds of 
his people and Dr John Dube and his people. He did not erect 
any fences. Phoenix Settlement was freely accessible to all. 


1. All Men Are Brothers - Life and Thoughts of Mahatma 
Gandhi as told in his own words (Paris: UNESCO 
1959), p.177. 

2. S.N. Bhattacharyya, Mahatma Gandhi - The Journalist 
(Bombay: Asia Publishing House, 1965), p. 80. 


Preface 


I have great pleasure in presenting the work Gandhi in 
South Africa: A Racist or A Liberator? before the readers. I 
think a brief background on how this work was born is in order. 
This book took shape in my mind due to a number of events 
and controversies in the last couple of years, centered on 
Gandhi’s approach to race and racial discrimination. The year 
2015 marked the centenary of Mahatma Gandhi’s return to 
India from South Africa. A large number of programmes were 
organized by governmental and non-governmental 
organizations in India and South Africa on the occasion. 
However, what was lacking in these celebrations was an 
objective analysis of Gandhi’s life and work in South Africa. 
This was significant in the context of the literature produced 
during this period which portrayed Gandhi as an ardent casteist 
and racist who had disdain for the natives of South Africa. The 
United Nations declared theme of International Day of Peace - 
2015 was “Partnerships for Peace-Dignity for All.” I was 
invited to speak on the theme from a Gandhian perspective by 
the Odisha Peace Builders Forum in a public meeting held at 
Bhubaneswar on 21* September 2015. On the same day, I had 
the opportunity to address a workshop held at the Action Aid 
regional office, in Bhubaneswar, Odisha. The workshop was 
on the theme “Annihilation of Caste — The views of Dr. 
Ambedkar and Gandhi.” These programmes provided me a 
chance to study Gandhi’s approach to caste and race. 


In June 2016 the then Hon. President of India, on the 
occasion of his visit to Ghana, unveiled a statue of Mahatma 
Gandhi at University of Ghana’s Legon campus. Subsequently, 
mainly a group of Professors started an online petition at 


16 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


https://www.change.org/ -the world’s platform for change- in 
September 2016, for the removal of the statue of Gandhi on the 
ground that he was a racist. They cited six quotes of Gandhi to 
substantiate their claim. In response to it, I was instrumental in 
preparing a note on Gandhi Jayanti day entitled “Truth about 
the demand for removal of the Gandhi Statue in Ghana 
University” and it was posted on the same online platform. This 
effort was appreciated by many including Rajmohan Gandhi, 
well known historian and biographer of Gandhi. It was 
subsequently published in the form of an article in Gandhi 
Marg, journal of Gandhi Peace Foundation, New Delhi. I was 
also invited by the Carolian Theological Forum of St. Charles 
Seminary, Nagpur to address at a symposium on “Caste-based 
Discrimination in the Indian Church” on October 2, 2017. My 
presentation was subsequently published in the form of a book 
“Caste-based Discrimination in the Indian Church: Lessons 
from Gandhi's fight for human dignity” by Gandhi 
International, Carcassonne, France to remove worldwide 
misconceptions on this issue. As a part of 150" Birth 
anniversary celebrations of Mahatma Gandhi, the Government 
of India started the work on a bust of Gandhi in August 2018 at 
Blantyre, Malawi's second largest city. In October 2018, an 
online petition was started against the proposed Gandhi bust on 
the same online platform and the work was stopped due to a 
High court injunction. As the petition of Malawi was on similar 
lines as of Ghana, some of the journalists approached me to 
find out the truth in the controversial statements of Gandhi 
cited by them. All these developments provided me an 
opportunity to study and reflect on Gandhi’s approach to caste 


Siby K. Joseph 17 


and race both in South Africa and India which convinced me 
that Gandhi was neither a casteist nor a racist. 


To commemorate the sesquicentennial birth anniversary 
of Mahatma Gandhi, the CoHaB Indian Diaspora Centre, 
University of Mumbai, organized an interdisciplinary 
International Conference on “A Mahatma in Waiting: The 
Diasporic Gandhi Re-visited” in February 2019 at the Kalina 
Campus of the University of Mumbai. I had the opportunity to 
present Gandhi’s Approach to Race and Racial Discrimination 
and his fight for the dignity of people of Indian origin in South 
Africa before an international audience including people from 
African countries. This presentation was possible only by 
taking into account all major writings as well as actions of 
Gandhi on these issues which cropped up in the course of his 
long and eventful life in South Africa. The notes I prepared for 
this presentation and the earlier ones form the basis for the 
present work. 


In the preparation of this work, I am indebted to many 
persons. First and foremost I would like to express my deep 
sense of gratitude to late Chandrashekhar Dharmadhikari, 
Chairman of the Institute of Gandhian Studies, nonagenarian 
freedom fighter, jurist, Gandhian scholar and activist who 
passed away on January 3, 2019, who was very eager about my 
participation in the International Conference at Mumbai. He 
was keen that I should undertake studies of this nature so that 
our Institute will be in the forefront of removing the 
misconceptions about Gandhi’s approach in matters relating to 
race and racism. He used to discuss with me in the wake of 
each and every controversy related to this matter. Our Director, 


18 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Bharat Mahodaya was highly supportive in this regard and took 
the responsibility of publishing this work by the Institute. My 
senior colleague and member of the teaching faculty of the 
Institute, Ramchandra Pradhan opened my vistas of knowledge 
through stimulating discussions and insights on these matters. 
He was always with me in my academic endeavours. 


It was Nilufer E. Barucha, Professor, Director and 
Scientist-in-Charge, CoHaB Indian Diaspora Centre, University 
of Mumbai,who not only extended an invitation for the 
International Conference but also showed confidence in my 
ability to deal with the question of Gandhi’s approach to race 
and racial discrimination in South Africa. She took such a 
decision in spite of the presence of scholars and activists even 
from South Africa in the International Conference. I am 
grateful to Nilufer for her constant encouragement and support. 
My special thanks are due to Sridhar Rajeswaran, Advisory 
Board Member, CoHaB Indian Diaspora Centre and visiting 
Professor University of Mumbai for his insights on my 
presentation. I am thankful to Kirti Risbud, Research Associate, 
CoHaB Indian Diaspora Centre for her coordination and 
support throughout the International Conference. I am grateful 
to all delegates of the International Conference for critically 
analyzing my presentation. Among the delegates my special 
thanks are due to Kanya Padayachee, ECD Project Coordinator, 
Gandhi Development Trust, Durban, South Africa for 
discussing the issue at length and her encouragement. 


Soon after the Conference, I had the opportunity to 
discuss the main arguments I presented before the Conference 
with Usha Thakkar, Chairperson, Manibhavan Gandhi 


Siby K. Joseph 19 


Sangrahalya, Mumbai. She suggested to me to present Gandhi’s 
approach to caste and race in the form of a book. But I limited 
my analysis to the question of race. She has always been 
supportive in my academic work by availing relevant material 
and constantly encouraging my projects. I don’t know how to 
thank her and her research team at Manibhavan Gandhi 
Sangrahalya for the unconditional support. 


Each and every member of the staff of the Institute 
extended their support in the publication of this work. I am 
thankful to all of them. I am thankful to my elder brother Fr. 
Joseph K. J., who was kind enough to go through an earlier 
draft of this work and provide useful and critical comments. 


I am highly beholden to Ela Gandhi, granddaughter of 
Mahatma Gandhi and the founder of Gandhi Development 
Trust, Durban for contributing the foreword to this volume. It 
is befitting that this volume carries a foreword from a person 
who was born at Phoenix, and held very important positions as 
the member of South Africa's Parliament from 1994 to 2004 
and as the Chancellor of the Durban University of Technology. 


Last but not least my special thanks are due to my wife 
Arunima Maitra and my only daughter Almitra K. Siby who 
have always encouraged and supported me in my all academic 
writings. 


Though I got support from a host of eminent 
personalities, I alone would be responsible for any lapse or 
lacuna in the present work. 


20 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


This volume is a humble tribute to Kasturba and 
Mahatma Gandhi which will be released both in South Africa 
and India on the occasion of their 150" birth anniversary. I am 
confident that like my earlier works this volume too would be 
welcomed by common readers, academics and scholars 
working in the field. I hope that this work would help in 
dispelling the doubts from readers minds about Gandhi being a 
racist and promote further research on this topic. 


Siby K. Joseph 
Institute of Gandhian Studies, 
Wardha 


Chapter-1 
Introduction 


Gandhi’s South African days were widely discussed in 
2015 during the centenary celebrations of Gandhi’s return to 
India from South Africa. It provided an opportunity to have a 
fresh look at Gandhi’s life and work in the South African soil. 
Gandhi’s approach to race and the problem of racial 
discrimination especially in the South African phase were 
matters of discussion and debate. His approach to race and 
racial discrimination were criticized by a section of scholars, 
intellectuals and activists. It gathered momentum in recent 
times and was widely discussed in print and electronic media 
with the publication of some literature relating to it and the 
issues related to the installation of Gandhi statue in some 
African countries by the Indian government. It is interesting to 
note that the issues related to Gandhi’s approach to caste and 
race have been raised by Booker prize-winning author, 
Arundhati Roy, in her introduction titled ‘The Doctor and The 
Saint’! to the annotated edition of Annihilation of Caste 
originally written by B. R. Ambedkar. She again raised some 
of these issues while delivering a lecture at the University of 
Kerala in memory of Mahatma Ayyankali, a renowned dalit 
leader of the State. In the course of her speech, she castigated 
Gandhi for his racist and casteist approach. She even demanded 
that it was high time that all institutions named after Gandhi be 
rechristened.” 


22 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


In the same vein, a book viz. The South African Gandhi 
Stretcher Bearer of Empire was published simultaneously both 
in India and the United States. This book was written by 
Ashwin Desai and Goolam Vahed, scholars of Indian origin 
associated with South African universities. They argue that 
Gandhi during his two decade long stay in South Africa 
“remained true to Empire while expressing disdain for 
Africans. For Gandhi, whites and Indians were bound by an 
Aryan bloodline that had no place for the African. His racism 
was matched by his class (and caste) prejudice towards the 
Indian indentured.” 


The controversies and misconceptions about Gandhi’s 
approach to race and racial discrimination was further fuelled 
with the unveiling of a statue of Mahatma Gandhi at the 
recreational quadrangle of the University of Ghana’s Legon 
campus by the then Hon. President of India, Pranab Mukherjee, 
on the occasion of his visit to Ghana, on June 14, 2016. 
Following the installation of the statue of Mahatma Gandhi at 
the Legon campus, which is situated about 12 kilometers 
northeast of the centre of Accra, the capital city, a group of four 
university teachers of African Studies, history and law 
disciplines of Ghana University and one of the founders of 
Accra (dot) Alt, which promotes alternative African music, 
video and art, on September 12, 2016, filed a petition for the 
removal of the statue of Gandhi before the honourable 
members of the University of Ghana Council and the 
Chairman, Kwamena Ahwoi for consideration. Subsequently, it 
was posted in the form of an online petition at 
https://www.change.org/ — the world’s platform for change. 


Siby K. Joseph 23 


The main argument for the removal of the Gandhi statue raised 
in the petition was his alleged ‘racist identity’. 


In order to support their argument the petitioners had 
cited six quotes from the online edition of the Collected Works 
of Mahatma Gandhi maintained by Gandhi Serve Foundation, 
Berlin. The sensational news about it spread throughout the 
world in no time. The Republic of Ghana wanted to end the 
acrimony after the unveiling of the statue and finally decided to 
relocate the Gandhi statue at the University to a safer place. In 
a statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and 
Regional Integration, the Republic of Ghana on October 5, 
2016 said “While acknowledging that human as he was, 
Mahatma Gandhi may have had his flaws, we must remember 
that people evolve. He inspired movements for civil rights and 
freedom across the world...... The government would, 
therefore want to relocate the statue from the University of 
Ghana to ensure its safety and to avoid the controversy on the 
Legon Campus being a distraction of our strong ties of 
friendship that has existed over the years.” Finally on 12™ of 
December 2018 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional 
Integration removed the statue from the University of Ghana.* 
The Republic of Ghana had assured the Government of India 
that the statue will be inaugurated by a Minister in the local 
government.” On 27" of February , 2019 the statue of Mahatma 
Gandhi was relocated at India-Ghana Kofi Annan Centre for 
Excellence in ICT, Accra by Hon’ble Minister of Foreign 
Affairs and Regional Integration of the Republic Ghana in the 
presence of the High Commissioner of India to Ghana and the 
Hon’ble Minister for Communication of Ghana.° The High 


24 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Commissioner of India to Ghana, Birender Singh Yadav, 
speaking to journalists stated that, “the relocation of the statue 
to a prestigious location in Ghana will bring an end to what was 
a misguided campaign about certain writings of Mahatma 
Gandhi.” 


As a part of 150" Birth anniversary celebrations of 
Gandhi, Indian government started ‘India for Humanity’ 
initiative and decided to take the message of Mahatma Gandhi 
to all parts of the world including Africa where Gandhi lived 
for more than two decades. The construction of a Gandhi bust 
was started in August 20188 in a street named after Mahatma 
Gandhi in Blantyre, Malawi's second largest city. On 5” 
October 2018, to mobilize citizens against the proposed 
Gandhi bust in Blantyre an online petition was started by 
Kambewa Mpambira, a Malawian activist along with others on 
the same website as in the case of Ghana Gandhi statue issue.’ 
The petition states that a recent book researched by Ashwin 
Desai and Goolam Vahed, professors at the University of 
Johannesburg and the University of KwaZulu Natal, uncovered 
in detail that Gandhi was an ardent racist who thought Africans 
were “Kaffirs”. They quoted five statements of Gandhi to 
prove his contempt for the black African race. Despite these 
developments the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of 
India in a press release issued on October 30, 2018, just before 
the visit of Hon. Vice President of India, Venkaiah Naidu to 
Botswana, Zimbabwe and Malawi from October 31-November 
5, 2018 stated that in Malawi, Vice President is expected to 
inaugurate Business Incubation Center and India-Africa 
Institute of Agriculture and Rural Development and unveil a 


Siby K. Joseph 25 


Gandhi Bust. However a court in Malawi halted the work on 
the bust of Mahatma Gandhi. Judge Michael Tembo granted an 
injunction temporarily suspending work on the statue. The high 
court said work on the statue should be paused until a further 
hearing or a new court order.!° 


However, Malawi’s civil society umbrella organization 
Human Rights Consultative Committee (HRCC) and the Forum 
for National Development (FND) endorsed the construction 
of the Mahatma Gandhi statue and the construction of the 
International Conference centre in Blantyre saying the project 
cements the bilateral relation between Malawi and India.'! 
They strongly felt that the present developments are not in tune 
with the image of Malawi as ‘a peaceful country with a warm 
heart.’ Further, they held a consultative meeting on 15th 
November 2018 in Blantyre which brought together a cross 
section of the society such as academics, civil society 
organization (CSO) representatives, trade unionists, artists, 
faith leaders and members of the business community amongst 
others. A statement signed by HRCC Board Chairperson and 
FND Board Chairperson Robert Mkwezalamba and Bright 
Kampaundi Chodzi respectively emphasized that “Gandhi’s 
racist remarks should be reflected in the context of the time and 
circumstances they were made and should be weighed against 
his positive contribution to the world, namely that of ‘non- 
violent civil disobedience.’ We should recognize that Gandhian 
philosophy of peace and strategy of non-violence continues to 


inspire many in Malawi, Africa and across the globe.”!” 


On December 18, 2018, Gopalkrishna Gandhi, grandson 
and distinguished professor of history and politics at Ashoka 


26 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


University wrote an article viz. “Gandhi did not want and does 
not need statues” in the Hindustan Times.'* He quoted what 
Gandhi wrote in Harijan on February 11, 1939. “It will be a 
waste of good money to spend Rs 25,000 on erecting a clay or 
metallic statue of the figure of a man who is himself made of 
clay...” He is of the opinion that India should see the removal 
of Gandhi’s statue in Ghana as the decision of a sovereign 
people having a say in the design of their political architecture 
and their public spaces. He states that “Truth demands, 
Gandhi’s truth demands, that India should recognise that his 
use of term ‘Kaffir’ for Africans jars and is, today, 
unacceptable. But ‘the whole truth’ requires us to turn to 
President Mandela’s comment on Gandhi’s 125" birthday, 
“Gandhi must be judged in the context of the time and the 
circumstances.” 


On December 23, 2018, historian Ramachandra Guha 
wrote an essay in the Wire viz. “Setting the Record Straight on 
Gandhi and Race” He argued that “In his 20s, Gandhi was 
unquestionably a racist. He believed in a hierarchy of 
civilisations, with Europeans at the top, Indians just below 
them and Africans absolutely at the bottom. He spoke of the 
native inhabitants of Africa in patronising and even pejorative 
language. However, by the time he was in his mid 30s, Gandhi 
no longer spoke of Africans as inferior to Indians.”'4 
According to him, Gandhi overcame his racist approach 
comprehensively in the course of time and that is the reason 
why he became an exemplar for many African leaders in 
their struggles against racial discrimination. 


Siby K. Joseph 27 


On January 5, 2019, in response to Ramachandra 
Guha’s article, ‘Setting the Record Straight on Gandhi and 
Race’ Ashwin Desai wrote a piece in the Wire “Guha’s Story 
of Gandhi in South Africa Does Not Square with the Record.” 
He argues that “Ramachandra Guha’s Gandhi Before 
India published in 2013 was received with much consternation 
in South Africa. This was because in Guha’s quest to portray 
the South African Gandhi as a cosmopolitan anti-colonial 
fighter and apostle of non-racialism, he wrote out of history 
the brutal subjugation of Africans and the myriad resistances 
against the Imperial army. He turned a blind eye to Gandhi’s 
‘anti-African’ racism and support for the right of the white 
minority to hold political power.” According to Desai much 
after 1906 Gandhi continued to castigate and belittle Africans. 


On January 27, 2019, Obadele Kambon, Research 
Coordinator, Language, Literature and Drama Section, Institute 
of African Studies, University of Ghana who was also a part of 
the Gandhi Must Fall protest wrote an article in The Print viz. 
“Ram Guha is wrong. Gandhi went from a racist young man to 
a racist middle-aged man. '© He argues that there is 
enough textual evidence to back the claim that Mohandas 
Karamchand Gandhi is a racist. Therefore the argument of 
Guha that “By the time he was in his mid-30s, Gandhi no 
longer spoke of Africans as inferior to Indians” is not valid. He 
quoted Gandhi’s writings from 1906 till the end of his 
departure for India to substantiate his claim. 


On January 24, 2019 Rajmohan Gandhi, grandson and 
noted biographer of Gandhi wrote a piece in the Indian Express 
viz. “Why attacks on Mahatma Gandhi are good”. In this write 


28 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


up, he basically addresses two allegations that Gandhi 
disdained black people and supported British imperialism. 
Regarding the question whether Gandhi was in favour of 
imperialism, Rajmohan Gandhi says that the answer is some 
time yes, and Gandhi openly favoured it. He points out the fact 
that this is not a new “discovery” and Gandhi himself stated in 
his Autobiography that the British Empire was one of his two 
passions at the start of the 20th century. He further states that 
Queen Victoria and other eminent Britons declared that in their 
empire, all the races would be equal and everyone would enjoy 
the freedoms of belief and expression and the rule of law. Only 
when Gandhi realised that the imperial claim was false, he 
became a strong critique of the empire. On the question of 
disdain for black people, he admits that the younger Gandhi at 
times was ignorant and undoubtedly prejudiced about South 
Africa’s blacks, especially when provoked by the conduct of 
black convicts who were among his fellow inmates in South 
Africa’s prisons. This is also a known fact and many scholars 
including Rajmohan Gandhi have referred to it in their earlier 
writings. 


All these developments created unease about Gandhi’s 
approach to these issues among general readers who have not 
studied Gandhi systematically and in detail. In this context, it is 
necessary to revisit Gandhi’s approach to race and racial 
discrimination and his fight for dignity of people of Indian 
origin in South Africa. This study attempts to take into account 
all major writings as well as actions of Gandhi on these issues 
which cropped up in the course of his long and eventful life in 
South Africa. This will give us an opportunity to clarify and 


Siby K. Joseph 29 


understand Gandhi’s mind and his actual practice with regard 
to race and racial discrimination and the main issues involved 
in it. It is true that his views on race and racial discrimination 


are likely to produce confusion and controversy, if they are 
analysed out of context and time. Therefore, this study deals 
with Gandhi’s thinking and actions in regard to race and racial 
discrimination especially in South Africa and their evolution, if 


any, in the course of his life. 


Notes and References 


1. 


See Arundhati Roy’s Introduction, “The Doctor and The Saint” 
in B. R Ambedkar, Annihilation of the Caste: The Annotated 
Critical Edition (New Delhi: Navayana, 2014). 


. For details see 


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Mahatma-Gandhi-was- 
a-casteist-Arundhati-Roy says/articleshow/38580172.cms 


See also 
http://www.newindianexpress.com/cities/thiruvananthapuram/G 
andhi-Looked-Down-upon-Dalits-Says-Arundhati- 
Roy/2014/07/1 8/article2335605.ece 


. Ashwin Desai, Goolam Vahed , The South African Gandhi 


¿Stretcher Bearer of Empire, (New Delhi : Navayana, 2015). 


4. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-46552614 


. https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/world- 


news/ghana-to-reinstall-statue-of-mahatma-gandhi-at- 
prominent-location-in-accra/articleshow/67197361.cms 


. http://www.hciaccra.gov.in/event_detail.php?id=52 
. https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/M 


ahatma-Ghandi-statue-finds-final-destination-in-Ghana- 
726668# 


. https://www.thequint.com/news/world/mahatma-gandhi-statue- 


protests-in-malawi 


30 


14. 


15. 
16. 


Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


. https://www.change.org/p/the-mayor-of-blantyre-stop-erecting- 


mahatma-gandhi-s-statue-at-ginnery-corner-blantyre 


. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-4605 1184 


. http://www.maravipost.com/malawis-hrec-fnd-backs-mahatma- 


gandhi-statue-erection-wants-matter-out-of-court/ 


. Ibid. 


. https://www.hindustantimes.com/columns/gandhi-did-not-want- 


and-does-not-need-statues/story- 
YSWKCNDEcrrGOlztoJDO1K.html 
https://thewire.in/history/setting-the-record-straight-on-gandhi- 
and-race A shorter version of this article has appeared in The 
Telegraph 
https://thewire.in/history/ramachandra-guha-gandhi-south-africa 


https://theprint.in/opinion/ramachandra-guha-is-wrong-a- 
middle-aged-gandhi-was-racist-and-no-mahatma/168222/ 


Chapter-2 


Gandhi and Racial Discrimination in South Africa 


The controversies and confusion about Gandhi’s views 
on race and racial discrimination were mainly centered on his 
life and work in South Africa. However, it is to be noted that 
young Mohandas had to deal with the question of caste and 
race even at a young age. He protested against the practice of 
untouchability at a tender age of twelve at his home in the case 
of a scavenger named Uka, an ‘untouchable’, who used to come 
to his house for cleaning latrines. As a young boy, he reminded 
his mother that she was entirely wrong in considering physical 
contact with an untouchable as a sinful act and quite often 
touched untouchables at his school. He always went much 
beyond caste and religious barriers. 


Gandhi was made an outcaste for his decision to go to 
England for law studies by his caste men. Despite that he 
remained adamant and totally indifferent to the feelings of his 
caste men. It is true that after coming from England he did 
perform some acts of atonement. But it is quite evident from 
his writings in the Autobiography that he was not much 
bothered about his excommunication from his caste. He had 
hardly any ill feeling against his people who had 
excommunicated him. Further he was not much keen to get 
back to the fold of his caste.! From Gandhi’s firmness and 
persistence in his decision to go to England, it is clear that he 


32 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


did not suffer from any racist feelings. He was aware that he 
was going to the land of the Whites who were highly 
prejudiced against the non-European races. Those 
considerations never came into his mind when he decided to go 
to England to study law. In fact he broke the caste and racial 
barriers by sticking to his decision. 


Gandhi’s three years stay in England and his 
interactions with people of different religions and ideological 
orientations not only broadened his vision but also transformed 
his ideas about religion, caste and race. During his stay in 
England, he was introduced to different religious and spiritual 
traditions and their scriptures including The Holy Bible, The 
Bhagavad Gita and some Buddhist and Islamic literature like 
the Light of Asia and Carlyle's Heroes and Hero-Worship. All 
these readings and acquaintances inspired him to unify the 
basic teachings of different religions.” Later recalling his days 
in London, he wrote in his Autobiography “That renunciation 
was the highest form of religion appealed to me greatly.” 
Renunciation in every tradition including Hinduism brings a 
man to a point where he becomes free from narrow limitations 
and helps him to develop a universal outlook which involves 
crossing all social barriers such as race and caste. One could 
easily infer from his early life that young Mohandas to a great 
extent, transcended caste and racial prejudices. 


Gandhi went to South Africa in 1893 in search of a 
better prospect as a lawyer. He came face to face with racial 
discrimination even during the initial stages of his stay in South 
Africa. For instance, when he visited the Durban Court, the 
magistrate ordered him to take off his turban (headgear) which 
Gandhi refused and walked out of the Court. But more 


Siby K. Joseph 33 


humiliations were yet to be heaped upon him. While travelling 
to Pretoria with a first class train ticket, he was literally thrown 
out of the compartment at the Pietermaritzburg railway station. 
He faced further insults in the subsequent coach journey. In the 
course of the journey, he was even refused accommodation in 
Grand National Hotel in Johannesburg. These incidents are so 
well known to be discussed here in detail. All these had 
happened to him despite the fact that he was a representative of 
British Indians, all of whom in the technical sense were British 
subjects. According to Queen Victoria’s proclamation of 1858, 
all imperial subjects were entitled to equality. Some critics like 
Arundhati Roy argue that “Gandhi was not offended by racial 
discrimination.” But he was primarily concerned with 
indignities inflicted on elite section which according to Roy 
was constituted by ‘passenger Indians’ — Indian merchants who 
were predominantly Muslims but also privileged caste Hindus.* 
She produces no evidence to substantiate her inference that 
Gandhi was not offended by racial discrimination. 


Gandhi was all set to come back to India after a year of 
stay in 1894. Even he was given a farewell party on the eve of 
his return journey to India in April 1894. It was in the midst of 
the farewell party, Gandhi came across a news item that had 
appeared in Natal Mercury about the proposed Bill by the Natal 
Government to disenfranchise Indians. It was on the request of 
the people of Indian origin gathered in the farewell party that 
Gandhi decided to stay back and take up such a blatant case of 
racial discrimination. It was within four months of his extended 
stay that he with the cooperation of other Indians in South 
Africa took the initiative to form Natal Indian Congress in 
August 1894. Its membership was open to all sections of 
Indians living in South Africa. The Congress was committed to 


34 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


work for the welfare of indentured labourers too. Roy’s 
reference to Natal Indian Congress (NIC) being an elitist 
organization? is presented in such a way as if it is a new 
discovery by her. The fact is that Gandhi himself had admitted 
in his Autobiography that “Although the members of the Natal 
Indian Congress included the colonial-born Indians and the 
clerical class, the unskilled wage-earners, the indentured 
labourers were still outside its pale. The Congress was not yet 
theirs. They could not afford to belong to it by paying the 
subscription and becoming its members.” Roy even forgets 
that even Indian National Congress which was constituted as 
early as 1885 had remained an elitist club as late as 1920. Even 
the stalwart leaders of Indian National Congress could not 
make the Indian National Congress as a mass organisation even 
after 35 years of their leadership. It was only when Gandhi took 
over the leadership he opened its gates for the common masses 
of India. It is too much to expect that young Gandhi could have 
done this in 1894 when Natal Indian Congress was formed. 
What is more, Roy again indulges in pick and choose even in 
respect of the membership fee of Natal Indian Congress. To 
make it appear more elitist, she underlines the fact that its 
membership was three pounds without mentioning whether it 
was monthly or yearly membership. She also fails to mention 
the fact that it had a monthly membership of 5 shillings. The 
fact underlined by Roy that NIC was an elitist club can be 
easily controverted by perusal of the report of NIC prepared 
and presented by Gandhi as its General Secretary in August 
1894.’ That report gives a brief summary of things NIC has 
done for the indentured labourers. Ignoring all these 
documentary evidences, Roy sticks to her unsubstantiated 
position that Gandhi and NIC always distanced themselves 
from indentured labourers. 


Siby K. Joseph 35 


He was very much concerned about the question of 
colour discrimination inflicted upon people whether it is on 
Indians or natives of Africa. It is true that Gandhi was basically 
taking up issues of people of Indian origin. It doesn’t mean that 
he was not concerned about racial discrimination imposed on 
the natives of Africa. He was very much unhappy about the 
British policy of denying rights on basis of the colour of the 
skin whether it was for Indian or Black population. While 
fighting for the rights of franchise of Indians Gandhi wrote in a 
letter to the Editor, The Times of Natal, dated October 25, 1894 
“The Indians do not regret that capable Natives can exercise the 
franchise. They would regret if it were otherwise. They, 
however, assert that they too, if capable, should have the right. 
You, in your wisdom, would not allow the Indian or the Native 
the precious privilege under any circumstances, because they 
have a dark skin. You would look to the exterior only. So long 
as the skin is white it would not matter to you whether it 
conceals beneath it poison or nectar. To you the lip-prayer of 
the Pharisee, because he is one, is more acceptable than the 
sincere repentance of the publican, and this, I presume, you 
would call Christianity. You may; it is not Christ's.” 


Further he asserts that racial or colour discrimination is 
against the principles of Jesus Christ or Christianity. “Suffer 
little children to come unto me,” said the Master. His disciples 
(?) in the Colony would improve upon the saying by inserting 
“white” after “little”. During the children's fete, organized by 
the Mayor of Durban, I am told there was not a single coloured 
child to be seen in the procession. Was this a punishment for 
the sin of being born of coloured parents? Is this an incident of 


36 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


the qualified citizenship you would accord to the hated 
“Rammysammy.’’ If He came among us, will he not say to 
many of us, “I know you not”? Sir, may I venture to offer a 
suggestion? Will you reread your New Testament? Will you 
ponder over your attitude towards the coloured population of 
the Colony? Will you then say you can reconcile it with the 
Bible teaching or the best British traditions? If you have 
washed your hands clean of both Christ and British traditions, I 
can have nothing to say; I gladly withdraw what I have written. 
Only it will then be a sad day for Britain and for India if you 
have many followers.”® 


Again in his “Open Letter” which Gandhi wrote in 
December, 1894 to the Hon. Members of the Legislative 
Council and the Legislative Assembly he drew their attention to 
the question of racial discrimination “I suppose there can be no 
doubt that the Indian is a despised being in the Colony, and that 
every opposition to him proceeds directly from that hatred. If 
that hatred is simply based upon his colour, then, of course, he 
has no hope. The sooner he leaves the Colony the better. No 
matter what he does, he will never have the white skin.” 


The case of Balasundaram, a Tamil indentured labour, 
employed by a White settler conclusively proves Gandhi’s 
concern for the poor and downtrodden section of Indian people 
living in South Africa even in the initial stages. Balasundaram 
certainly did not belong to the high caste or class or the elitist 
section of the society. Yet Gandhi instantaneously took up his 
case. He had been badly beaten by his employer. He came to 
Gandhi with tattered clothes, broken teeth and a bleeding 
mouth. There was an obnoxious practice were by an indentured 


Siby K. Joseph 37 


labourer was supposed to take off his headgear before his 
European master. The system of indentured labour was in no 
way less than slavery. He had appeared before Gandhi, with a 
very humiliating and demeaning demeanour. He had even taken 
off his headgear in front of Gandhi. Gandhi not only was 
saddened but even felt a kind of personal humiliation being a 
member of the Indian community. Gandhi was very much 
concerned about protecting his dignity and asked him to put 
back his head gear. Gandhi not only got him medically treated 
but also got a legal case filed against his employer. The case of 
Balasundaram was ultimately settled. His case and the kind 
treatment which Gandhi had given to him reached out to large 
sections of indentured labour. They could see that here was a 
man who was not only sympathetic to them but also ever 
willing to take up cudgels on their behalf. Thus a stream of 
indentured labourers started visiting Gandhi’s office with their 
own tales of woe and misery. This case has touched Gandhi to 
the core of his being so much so that later reflecting on the case 
he wrote “It has always been a mystery to me how men can feel 
themselves honoured by the humiliation of their fellow 
beings.”!° That shows his deep concern for the dignity of all 
men whatever may be their race, colour or creed. 


Ignoring such deep concern and commitment of Gandhi 
for all, Roy quotes a passage from Gandhi’s Open Letter 
addressed to the members of the Legislative Council and the 
Legislative Assembly in December 1894. She goes to the extent 
of accusing Gandhi of making differentiation between 
“passenger Indians and indentured Indians’. The passage quoted 
by Roy out of context is as follows: “Whether they are Hindus 
or Mahommedans, they are absolutely without any moral or 
religious instruction worthy of the name. They have not learned 


38 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


enough to educate themselves without any outside help. Placed 
thus, they are apt to yield to the slightest temptation to tell a lie. 
After some time, lying with them becomes a habit and a 
disease. They would lie without any reason, without any 
prospect of bettering themselves materially, indeed, without 
knowing what they are doing. They reach a stage in life when 
their moral faculties have completely collapsed owing to 
neglect.”!! 


She deliberately ignores both preceding and the 
following passages from the same letter of Gandhi which could 
have given the actual context of Gandhi’s observations quoted 
by her. The preceding passage provides the context of Gandhi’s 
comment. That comment was given by Gandhi in anticipation 
of objections by the administration towards Gandhi’s demand 
for better treatment of Indians at the hands of authorities as 
they are ‘subjects’ of the British Empire. Gandhi had advanced 
two arguments in favour of his demands. His first argument 
was that some of the weaknesses from which the Indians suffer 
could be attributed to the circumstances they are brought and 
lodged in South Africa. What is more, even the records of 
people of other races were no better in this respect. His second 
argument was that after being brought from India, they are 
deprived of moral education and are left to fend for themselves 
in a hostile and uncongenial atmosphere. Roy hardly pays any 
attention to these explanations of Gandhi and quotes the above 
passage as if that is the real assessment of Indians and their 
character by Gandhi. She also ignores a very pertinent 
observation of Gandhi in the same letter in respect of 
indentured labourers. He wrote “They come to Natal on a 
starvation wages (I mean here the indentured Indians). They 


Siby K. Joseph 39 


find themselves placed in a strange position and amid 
uncongenial surroundings.” !” 


The passage following the preceding one is really soul- 
stirring and involves the real empathy of Gandhi for indentured 
labourers which reads as follows “There is also a very sad form 
of lying. They cannot dare tell the truth, even for their wantonly 
ill-treated brother, for fear of receiving ill-treatment from their 
master. They are not philosophic enough to look with 
equanimity on the threatened reduction in their miserable 
rations and serve corporal punishment, did they dare to give 
evidence against their master. Are these men, then, more to be 
despised than pitied? Are they to be treated as scoundrels, 
deserving no mercy, or are they to be treated as helpless 
creatures, badly in need of sympathy? Is there any class of 
people who would not do as they are doing under similar 
circumstances?”!* 


Gandhi had gone to India in June 1896 and published 
the Green Pamphlet listing the grievances of the British Indians 
in South Africa in the month of August. He went around 
different parts of India and addressed several meetings to 
explain the grievances of Indians in South Africa and tried to 
mobilize public opinion in favour of the same. On his return to 
Durban he was interviewed on the deck of the ship by the 
correspondent of Natal Advertiser in January 1897. Roy again 
skillfully culled out a passage taking it out of context from that 
interview to prove that Gandhi was once again at his game of 
distancing himself from the ‘coolies.’ That passage reads as 
follows: “I have said most emphatically, in the pamphlets and 
elsewhere, that the treatment of the indentured Indians is no 
worse or better in Natal than they receive in other parts of the 


40 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


world. I have never endeavoured to show that the indentured 
Indians have been receiving cruel treatment.”!* Actually 
Gandhi was responding to the question asked by the 
correspondent “In your Indian campaign what attitude did you 
adopt towards the indentured Indian question?’’ The above 
passage quoted by Roy clearly takes out only a few lines from 
the detailed answer given by Gandhi in which he clears his 
position. Even in the earlier part of the same interview Gandhi 
had clearly stated that while being in India, he never tried “to 
blacken the character of the Natal Colonists.”!> Explaining his 
position further he said: 


“I have even said in the pamphlet that instances I have 
quoted show that the treatment that the Indians receive was 
owing to the prejudice against them, and what I have 
endeavoured to show is the connection between the prejudice 
and the laws passed by the Colony to restrict the freedom of the 
Indian. ... I have said that Indians are the most hated beings in 
South Africa and that they are being ill-treated; but, for all that 
we do not ask the Government for redress with regard to these 
things, but with regard to the legal disabilities that are placed 
upon the Indians. We protest against the legislation passed by 
prejudice, and redress has been asked for against them. This, 
then, is simply a question of toleration on the part of the 
Indian.” '° 


How much Gandhi had gone beyond caste and race 
prejudices could be further illustrated by his firm decision to 
forsake his wife who refused to clean chamber pots used by one 
of his clerks who was a Christian, born of Panchama parents. It 
would be quite appropriate to relate the story in Gandhi’s own 
words. “I was far from being satisfied by her merely carrying 


Siby K. Joseph 41 


the pot. I would have her do it cheerfully. So I said, raising my 
voice: 'I will not stand this nonsense in my house.’ The words 
pierced her like an arrow. She shouted back: 'Keep your house 
to yourself and let me go.' I forgot myself, and the spring of 
compassion dried up in me. I caught her by the hand, dragged 
the helpless woman to the gate, which was just opposite the 
ladder, and proceeded to open it with the intention of pushing 
her out.”!” These words echo his total commitment against 
caste and racial prejudices and total rejection of untouchability. 


In the Boer!® War of 1899, Gandhi had raised 1,100 
strong Ambulance Corps out of which three or four hundred 
were free Indians, and the majority was indentured labourers.'® 
The Ambulance Corps was primarily meant to nurse and serve 
the wounded soldiers in the war. The important point is that 
contrary to the general perception of his critics that he was 
keeping a distance from the indentured labourers, actually he 
was so much in close contact with them that more than two 
thirds of his corps comprised of them. One could easily infer 
that he had already transcended the caste / class barriers as he 
was Closely working with the indentured labourers. 


Before Gandhi’s return to India in 1901, a big farewell 
party was arranged in his honour and lot of gifts comprising of 
even gold and diamond were given to him for the services 
rendered by him to the community. Kasturba wanted to keep 
some of them. Gandhi ultimately prevailed on her and out of 
these gifts a Trust was created for the service of the Indian 
community. In December 1901, he attended the Calcutta 
session of the Indian National Congress and moved a resolution 
on problems of Indians in South Africa. One finds Gandhi 
deeply anguished by seeing the prevalence of ‘untouchablity in 


42 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 
a fair measure’? even among Congress delegates. What 
shocked him more was insanitary conditions in and around the 
premises where the Congress session was being held, 
particularly in the lavatories. He tried to impress upon Congress 
volunteers to undertake the cleaning work. They flatly refused 
by saying that ‘that is not our work, it is the scavenger's work.”! 
Finding the entire cleaning beyond him, he satisfied himself by 
cleaning the lavatory used by him. 


Gandhi again returned to South Africa in December 
1902 and started serving the community along with his 
professional work. This is the period he established himself 
both professionally and politically. In 1903, Indian Opinion 
was established to consolidate the Indian community and to 
serve as a platform for raising their issues. In this phase, we can 
see some happenings which changed the course of his life. He 
got an opportunity to read Ruskin’s Unto This Last in a train 
journey. Reading of this book brought instantaneous and 
practical transformation in his life. Gandhi found resonance of 
some of his deepest convictions in this great book of Ruskin. 
He reduced the essential teachings of Unto This Last into three 
basic principles. They were: 


1. That the good of the individual is contained in the good 
of all. 


2. That a lawyer's work has the same value as the barber's 
inasmuch as all have the same right of earning their 
livelihood from their work. 


3. That a life of labour, i.e., the life of the tiller of the soil 
and the handicraftsman, is the life worth living.” 


Siby K. Joseph 43 


The third principle was a new discovery for Gandhi. He 
decided to reorient his life according to the above principles 
which led to the establishment of Phoenix Settlement in 1904. 
He not only shifted the press of Indian Opinion to the 
settlement but also took a number of steps to lead a life of 
simplicity and put into practice the principles of dignity of 
labour and self reliance. It also provided him an opportunity to 
experiment in the field of education in a school environment. 
Gandhi made it clear that in his Phoneix School “Indians of any 
caste or community will be admitted. No distinctions will be 
made in such matters as food, etc.” 

It was in 1906 that Zulus rebelled against the British. 
Once again he raised an Ambulance Corps to serve the 
wounded involved in the war. It provided an opportunity to get 
in close contact with Zulus in the course of work. He was very 
sympathetic and sensitive to the sufferings of the Zulus 
particularly of their women folk. One has to bear in mind that 
his decision to adopt Brahmacharya in 1906 and to formulate 
his principle of Satyagraha in the same year had a lot to do 
with his experiences as stretcher bearer during the Zulu 
rebellion. Out of this work in the ambulance corps, he drew two 
major conclusions for his own life and work. One, anyone 
doing social work would have to lead a life of purity and self 
restraint. That brought him to a firm decision on 
Brahmacharya. Two, being a witness to the suffering of Zulu 
rebels, he came to the conclusion that if the weak and 
powerless in physical terms engaged in armed struggle that 
would boomerang on them causing them greater suffering. That 
further strengthened his already held opinion that non-violent 
resistance was the best way to struggle against the acts of 


44 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


injustice. Thus two of the momentous decisions of Gandhi’s 
life, Brahmacharya and Satyagraha were taken out of his deep 
empathy with the sufferings of Zulu people. These were also 
two major steps on the road to his Mahatmahood. His intense 
personal transformation is reflected in his life and actions of 
coming days. 


It was at that critical moment the draft Asiatic Law 
Amendment Ordinance was published in Transvaal 
Government Gazette. It sought to make it compulsory for every 
Indian above the age of eight living in Transvaal to register 
himself/ herself, failing which they would be facing all types of 
consequences including deportation. There was a great stir 
among Indian community against the Ordinance and Gandhi 
termed it a ‘Black Act.’4 A meeting was held at the Empire 
theatre building of Johannesburg on 11" September 1906. It 
was unanimously decided to resist this highly discriminatory 
Act irrespective of its costs and consequences. They decided to 
struggle against it ‘in the name of God’ or with’ God as 
witness.” That decision is taken to be the birth of Satyagraha. 
It was just the beginning of a number of satyaragaha struggles 
which Gandhi led later in South Africa. 


During this period; Gandhi was introduced to John 
Finot’s classic work Race Prejudice. This work helped Gandhi 
to understand the intricacies of race and broadened his vision 
on the issue of racism. Anil Nauriya in a paper presented at the 
Centre for French and Francophone Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru 
University, New Delhi on March 19, 2008 emphasized this 
point. He wrote, “An important French influence dating from 
his South Africa years, which on matters of race was perhaps 


Siby K. Joseph 45 


more pointed and therefore efficacious than that of any of the 
other writers he had read till then, is, oddly enough, less widely 
known. This is that of Jean Finot (1858-1922) whose work 
“Race Prejudice” had been commended in Gandhi’s journal 
Indian Opinion on September 7, 1907. Earlier, on March 9, 
1907, The New York Times had described Finot as a “French 
iconoclast on race prejudice”. Finot’s work against racial 
prejudice had a significant impact on Gandhi; it accelerated his 
transformation in South Africa from one who was seeking 
equality with Europeans to one who spoke in terms of equality 
for all. This is an element in the sources of his intellectual 
make-up that has not received adequate attention, even if 
Gandhi’s mind was already working in this direction.” 


Gandhi in one of his letters addressed to L. W. Ritch 
dated April 12, 1911 made a reference to Finot’s book. Gandhi 
asked him to get the same from Henry Polak’s collection to 
present it to Canon Almett, who was supposed to leave for 
England shortly. It is clear that Gandhi wanted to popularise the 
ideas of Finot. Reference to Finot can be seen in his Indian 
days too. He wrote in Young India in 1924 about blacks in 
general, while acknowledging a cable he received from Marius 
Garney, the Chairman of Fourth Annual International 
Convention of Negro Peoples of the World expressing their 
sympathy for India’s struggle for freedom. “Finot has shown by 
his scientific researches that there is in them no inherent 
inferiority as is commonly supposed to be the case. All they 
need is opportunity. I know that if they have caught the spirit of 
the Indian movement, their progress must be rapid."”” 


46 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Gandhi’s changing vision was very much revealed in 
one of his speeches in the Y.M.C.A., Johannesburg, on the 
question, “Are Asiatics and the Coloured races a menace to the 
Empire?” He said “We hear nowadays a great deal of the 
segregation policy, as if it were possible to put people in water- 
tight compartments....I have said that the African races have 
undoubtedly served the Empire, and I believe so have the 
Asiatic races or, rather, British Indians. Have not the British 
Indians fought on many a battle-field? A people, moreover, 
who have religion as the basis of life, cannot be a menace. And 
how can the African races be a menace? They are still in the 
history of the world’s learners. Able-bodied and intelligent men 
as they are, they cannot but be an asset to the Empire. I believe 
with Mr. Creswell that they ought not to be protected. We do 
not want protection for them in any shape or form, but I do 
believe this—that they are entitled to justice, a fair field and no 
favour. Immediately you give that to them, you will find no 
difficulty. Whilst, therefore, Asiatics and other Coloured people 
cannot be a menace, Asiatics at least have been made a menace 
in some Colonies.” In the concluding part of his speech he 
said “If we look into the future, is it not a heritage we have to 
leave to posterity, that all the different races commingle and 
produce a civilization that perhaps the world has not yet seen? 
There are difficulties and misunderstandings, but I do believe, 
in the words of the sacred hymn, “We shall know each other 
better when the mists have rolled away.” The idea of 
commingling of all races was perhaps never thought of by any 
Indian in 1908. 


The Universal Races Congress of 1911 was a watershed 
in understanding the concept of race. Gandhi could not 
participate in the event. However, his close associate, H.S.L. 


Siby K. Joseph 47 


Polak spoke at Universal Races Congress in London. The 
Universal Races Congress, which Indian Opinion described as 
a “Parliament of Man”, discussed the racial question in its 
various aspects. The Congress was attended by representatives 
of the world’s religions and philosophies, and many papers 
were read. Annie Besant and Gokhale also attended.” Gandhi, 
Olive Schreiner, the Coloured Peoples’ leader Dr A 
Abdurahman and the African lawyer Alfred Mangena (who 
would be one of the founders of the future African National 
Congress), among others, were among those from South Africa 
who were on the Honorary General Committee of the Universal 
Races Congress. In a letter addressed to Dr. Pranjivan Mehta on 
August 25, 1911, Gandhi wrote that he believes India can have 
no direct benefit from the Races Congress. He further mentions 
that there is an indirect benefit. But the relevant page is not 
available even in the Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi. 


The Union of South Africa came into being in the year 
1910. Gandhi described it as a “combination of hostile forces”. 
The coming of South African Union even accentuated some of 
the problems faced by the Indian community in South Africa. 
However, the visit of Gokhale to South Africa in 1912 and his 
meeting with General Smuts had aroused great hope for the 
solution of the problems arising out of Asiatic Registration Act 
and the much hated £3 tax on the ex-indentured labourers. But 
soon such hopes were belied. On top of it, on 14 March 1913, 
Cape Supreme Court, in a judgment pronounced that marriages 
not celebrated according to Christian rites and/or not registered 
by the Registrar of Marriages were invalid.*° Thus all Muslim 
and Hindu marriages performed according to traditional rites 
were declared invalid. That greatly infuriated large sections of 


48 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


the Indian community. All these finally led to resumption of 
Satyagraha. In the month of September a large number of 
Satyagrahies including Kasturba were arrested and imprisoned. 
Gandhi reiterated his earlier demands for new law validating 
the Indian marriages and abolition of £3 tax. Subsequently in 
November, several circumstances forced Gandhi to take out a 
Great March consisting of 2,037 men, 127 women and 57 
children,*! from Charlestown to Transvaal. Gandhi was arrested 
in the course of the March and was imprisoned. But the march 
continued. 


Finally on 11" December 1913, South African 
Government appointed a Commission under the chairmanship 
of Sir William Solomon, a Supreme Court judge, to look into 
the grievances of Indians. After going into the details of the 
issues, the commission recommended repeal of £3 tax and the 
legal validation of traditional marriages. Gandhi welcomed it 
which opened the road for new negotiations with the 
government. Ultimately a settlement was reached which led to 
the passage of Indian Relief Bill on 26" June, 1914 and 
termination of the struggle which had started in 1906. The 
major points covered by the bill included the following. 1. It 
validated all the marriages held legally in India except those 
who had more than one wife in India, one of them would be 
recognized as a wife in South Africa. 2. It abolished the annual 
license of three pounds from indentured Indian labourers who 
had failed to return to India and settled as freeman in South 
Africa after the completion of indenture. 3. It further provided 
that the domicile certificate issued by the Government to 
Indians in Natal bearing thumb impression of the holder of the 
permit would be recognized as conclusive evidence of his right 
to enter the South African Union as soon as his identity was 


Siby K. Joseph 49 


established. With final settlement Gandhi decided to return to 
India via London. Gandhi left South Africa for London on July 
18, 1914. But his intimacy with South African soil remained 
throughout his life. 


The brief survey of Gandhi’s life in South Africa shows 
that he has no disdain for the black natives of South Africa. On 
the contrary he questioned the British policy of discriminating 
people on the basis of the colour of the skin as early as 1894. 
He even went to the extent of discussing the idea of 
commingling of all races in 1908 which was revolutionary at 
that time. However, the focus of Gandhi’s activity was centered 
on Indians living in South Africa and he fought for the dignity 
of all people of Indian origin irrespective of their caste, 
religion, social and economic background. 


Notes and References: 


1. The storm in my caste over my foreign voyage was still 
brewing. It had divided the caste into two camps, one of which 
immediately re-admitted me, while the other was bent on 
keeping me out. To please the former my brother took me to 
Nasik before going to Rajkot, gave me a bath in the sacred 
river and, on reaching Rajkot, gave a caste dinner. I did not like 
all this. But my brother's love for me was boundless, and my 
devotion to him was in proportion to it, and so I mechanically 
acted as he wished, taking his will to be law. The trouble about 
re-admission to the caste was thus practically over. 


I never tried to seek admission to the section that had refused 
it. Nor did I feel even mental resentment against any of the 
headmen of that section. Some of these regarded me with 
dislike, but I scrupulously avoided hurting their feelings. I fully 
respected the caste regulations about ex-communication. 
According to these, none of my relations, including my father- 
in-law and mother-in-law, and even my sister and brother-in- 


50 


Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


law, could entertain me; and I would not so much as drink 
water at their houses. They were prepared secretly to evade the 
prohibition, but it went against the grain with me to do a thing 
in secret that I would not do in public. 

The result of my scrupulous conduct was that I never had 
occasion to be troubled by the caste; nay, I have experienced 
nothing but affection and generosity from the general body of 
the section that still regards me as ex-communicated. They 
have even helped me in my work, without ever expecting me to 
do anything for the caste. It is my conviction that all these good 
things are due to my non-resistance. Had I agitated for being 
admitted to the caste, had I attempted to divide it into more 
camps, had I provoked the castemen, they would surely have 
retaliated, and instead of steering clear of the storm, I should 
on arrival from England, have found myself in a whirlpool of 
agitation, and perhaps a party to dissimulation. 


. But the New Testament produced a different impression, 


especially the Sermon on the Mount which went straight to my 
heart. I compared it with the Gita.The verses, "But I say unto 
you, that ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on 
thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man take 
away thy coat let him have thy cloke too,' delighted me beyond 
measure and put me in mind of Shamal Bhatt's 'For a bowl of 
water, give a goodly meal' etc. My young mind tried to unify 
the teaching of the Gita, the Light of Asia and the Sermon on 
the Mount. 


. See Arundhati Roy’s Introduction, “The Doctor and The 


Saint” op.cit.p.65. 


4. Ibid. 
5. Ibid. 
6. M. K. Gandhi, An Autobiography or the Story of My 


experiments with Truth (Ahmedabad : Navajivan, 2010), 
p.141. 


Siby K. Joseph 51 


7. 


21. 
22. 


M. K. Gandhi, Report of The Natal Indian Congress, The 
Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi , (Herein after referred 
as CWMG)Publications Division Government of India, New 
Delhi. Vol .1 pp.245-251 (August, 1895). 


https://www.gandhiheritageportal.org/cwmg_volume_thumbvi 
ew/MQ==#page/292/mode/2up 


. The Times of Natal, dated October 25, 1894. 
. Refer Gandhi’s Open letter wrote around December 19, 1894 


to the Hon. Members of the Legislative Council and the 
Legislative Assembly, CWMG, Vol .1, pp.183-84. 


.M. K. Gandhi, An Autobiography or the Story of My 


experiments with Truth, op.cit. p.143. 


. See Arundhati Roy’s Introduction, “The Doctor and The 


Saint” op.cit.p.67. 


. M. K. Gandhi, Open Letter addressed to the members of the 


Legislative council and the legislative Assembly [Before 
December 19, 1894] CWMG, Vol .1, pp.183-84. 


. Ibid. p.184. 
. See Arundhati Roy’s Introduction, “The Doctor and The 


Saint”op.cit.p.68. 


. M. K. Gandhi, “Interview to Natal Advertiser” January 13, 


1897, CWMG, Vol .2, p.122. 


. Ibid. p.123. 
.M. K. Gandhi, An Autobiography or the Story of My 


experiments with Truth, op.cit. p.255. 


. Boers were the descendants of the original Dutch settlers of 


Southern Africa. 


.M. K. Gandhi, Satyagraha in South Africa (Ahmedabad: 


Navajivan, 2015), pp.70-71. 


.M. K. Gandhi, An Autobiography or the Story of My 


experiments with Truth, op.cit.. p.206. 
Ibid. 
Ibid. 275. 


52 


23. 
24. 
25. 
26. 


27. 
28. 


29. 
30. 
31. 


Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


M. K. Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 9-1-1909. 
M. K. Gandhi, Satyagraha in South Africa, op.cit., p.90. 
Ibid. p.97. 


https://www.academia.edu/1830861/Freedom_Race_and_Fra 
ncophonie_Gandhi_and_the_Construction_of_Peoplehood 


M. K. Gandhi, Young India, 21-8- 1924. 


Gandhi in his Johannesburg Speech, May 18, 1908, CWMG, 
Vol. 8, p. 246. 


M. K. Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 26-8-1911. 
Ibid. p p.254-55. 
Ibid. p. 280. 


Chapter-3 


Criticisms against Gandhi in South Africa: 
An Analysis 


In the last chapter, an attempt has been made to give an 
overview of Gandhi’s life and struggle in South Africa with 
special reference to his approach to caste and racial 
discrimination. Incidentally, it also answers some of the 
criticisms raised against Gandhi. However, understanding 
Gandhi’s life in South Africa in a particular historical context 
and the probable reasons why he acted in a particular manner 
demand separate analysis of the major issues raised by his 
critics like Lelyveld,! Roy, Desai and Vahed. 


For the sake of analysis, the major points of criticism 
against Gandhi’s two decade long stay and work in South 
Africa have been classified into four broad categories. 1. 
Gandhi used the Aryan bloodline racist theory which binds the 
whites and Indians together and it had no place for the 
Africans. 2. That he held the African Blacks in very low esteem 
and even went to the extent of using a derogatory term like 
‘kaffirs’ for them. He insisted on differentiation of Indians from 
the African Blacks at all points. Not only that, he hardly paid 
any attention to their sufferings, let alone take up any of their 
issues for a struggle. 3. The ultimate result of the struggle in 
South Africa failed to solve the real problems of Indian 
community in general and particularly those of its lower strata. 
4. A bird’s eye view of his entire work in South Africa clearly 
showed that he was an out and out loyalist to the British. He not 
only supported the British both in Boer and Zulu rebellion but 


54 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


went out of his way to display his loyalty and closeness to the 
British establishment again and again. 


Let us examine the issues one by one. As stated in the 
beginning, one of the main arguments of Desai and Vahed 
was that “For Gandhi, whites and Indians were bonded by an 
Aryan bloodline that had no place for the African.” They 
devoted the second Chapter of the book viz. “Brown over the 
Black” mainly to substantiate this argument. The Chapter starts 
with a quote from Gandhi. “History says that the Aryans’ home 
was not India but they came from Central Asia, and one family 
migrated to India and colonized it, the others to Europe. The 
government of that day was, so history says, a civilized 
government in the truest sense of the term. The whole Aryan 
literature grew up then..... When other nations were hardly 
formed, India was at its zenith, and the Indians of this age are 
descendants of that race.” This quote is culled out from “An 
Appeal to Every Briton in South Africa on the question of the 
Indian Franchise” dated December 16, 1895. This appeal was 
an attempt on the part of Gandhi to place before every Briton in 
South Africa, an Indian view of the Indian Franchise. The 
whole text of the quote is given in order to give an idea about 
the context. “Mr. Maydon made a speech at Bellair and a 
curious resolution was passed at the meeting. With the greatest 
deference to the honourable gentleman, I venture to take 
exception to his statement that the Indians have ever remained 
in a state of servitude and are, therefore, unfit for self- 
government. Although he invoked the aid of history in support 
of his statement, I venture to say that history fails to bear out 
the statement. In the first place Indian history does not date 


Siby K. Joseph 55 


from the invasion of Alexander the Great. But I take the liberty 
to say that India of that date will compare very favourably with 
Europe of today. In support of that statement I beg to refer him 
to the Greek description of India at pp. 169-70 of Hunter’s 
Indian Empire, partly quoted in my “Open Letter”. What, 
however, of India of a period previous to that date? History 
says that the Aryans’ home was not India but they came from 
Central Asia, and one family migrated to India and colonized it, 
the others to Europe. The government of that day was, so 
history says, a civilized government in the truest sense of the 
term. The whole Aryan literature grew up then. The India of 
Alexander’s time was India on the decline. When other nations 
were hardly formed, India was at its zenith, and the Indians of 
this age are descendants of that race. To say, therefore, that the 
Indians have been ever under servitude is hardly correct.” 
From a cursory look at the quote it is clear that he brought in 
reference to the Aryan bloodline in the course of his argument 
to refute the contention that Indians have ever remained in a 
state of servitude. In no way the Aryan bloodline is glorified. 
On the contrary they are described as colonizers. 


The authors also quote from the “Open Letter” which 
Gandhi wrote in December, 1894 to the Hon. Members of the 
Legislative Council and the Legislative Assembly. The quote 
starts with an incomplete sentence of Gandhi, that is, “I venture 
to point out that both the English and the Indians spring from a 
common stock, called the Indo-Aryan.” The year is mentioned 
as 1893 by the authors which is incorrect. Here also the full 
sentence of the quote is given which makes the context very 
clear. “In spite of the Premier's opinion to the contrary, as 


56 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


expressed in his speech at the second reading of the Franchise 
Bill, with the utmost deference to His Honour, I venture to 
point out that both the English and the Indians spring from a 
common stock, called the Indo-Aryan.” Gandhi’s reference to 
Aryan connection was in the context of defending his argument 
that Britishers cannot claim any superiority as a colonizer. 
Therefore, his attempt was to put the Indians on the same 
footing and not out of any disdain for the African blacks. He 
wanted to remind them that Indians were in no way inferior to 
Anglo Saxon brethren. 


Further, he wrote in the Indian Opinion, on April 22, 
1905 about certain restrictions on Indians in East London with 
regard to walking on foot-paths and residing in the town. The 
Town Council took legal proceedings against those Indians 
who disobeyed the racial law. Reflecting on it, Gandhi wrote 
“The Indians preferred an appeal against the decision on the 
plea that they were not ‘Asiatics’ but Aryans who had 
subsequently settled in India. We are constrained to say that our 
brethren have wasted their money on the litigation, and brought 
ridicule on themselves to boot.” From this reply it is clear that 
Gandhi was not in favour of claiming any sort of benefit on 
racial grounds or Aryan lineage. He advised them to submit 
quietly to the law and take out the passes. Further, they should 
continue the struggle in the parliament because they have the 
power and the right to vote. He was quite sure that it would 
yield good results if they exercised them judiciously. Thus it is 
clear that Gandhi neither used the Aryan theory to get undue 
benefits from Britishers nor was it used as Brown over the 
Black. 


Siby K. Joseph 57 


It is true that in today’s world particularly in Africa the 
word ‘kaffir’ is taken to be extremely derogatory and highly 
offensive. But one has to go into the actual context of the then 
South African situation to fully understand and asses it. It was a 
term generally used by one and all during those days without 
any feeling of racial prejudice or with derogatory implications. 
It can be substantiated by its widespread use in different kinds 
of literature from literary to sociological writings. The classic 
work Kaffir folk-lore: A selection from the traditional tales, 
which is a collection of stories prevalent among the people 
living on the eastern border of the Cape colony with copious 
explanatory notes by Geo. Mc Call Theal published way back 
in 1886 by S. Sonnenschein, Le Bas and Lowrey, London has 
an introductory chapter regarding the ‘kaffirs’. It gives 
explanation about the term ‘kaffir’. It is worth quoting to 
understand the very meaning of the term those days. “In South 
Africa the word Kaffir is often used in a general way to signify 
any black native who is not the descendant of an imported 
slave, but on the eastern frontier of the Cape Colony the term is 
usually restricted to a member of the Amaxosa tribe.”? It was 
used officially without any sort of derogatory connotations 
during the colonial period until the early twentieth century. 
Encyclopedia Britannica made frequent use of the term and 
eleventh edition of it published in 1911 had an article on the 
title. It describes Kaffirs as follows: “Today it is used to 
describe that large family of Bantu Negroes inhabiting the 
greater part of the Cape, the whole of Natal and Zululand, and 
the Portuguese dominions on the east coast south of the 
Zambezi. The name is also loosely applied to any negro 
inhabitant of South Africa.” Thus it is evident that when 


58 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Gandhi was using this term he did not mean any ill will to 
them. 


It is an undeniable fact that the Indians had not only 
suffered at the hands of the Whites of South Africa but also in 
their dealings with the Blacks purely in physical terms. Even 
Gandhi had greatly suffered at the hands of some of the African 
Blacks particularly during his prison days. Here one is 
reminded of the incident in which Gandhi was thrown out of 
the lavatory and narrowly escaped with his life and limb. 
Critics have rightly pointed out that Gandhi had demanded 
separate lavatories, food and even separate entrance for Indians 
at Durban Post and Telegraph Office. Natal Indian Congress 
was also in the forefront of making such demands. What the 
critics actually forget is the immediate context and real 
intentions behind these demands. If one takes into account the 
fact that Indians were being continuously harassed and insulted 
at the hands of clerks and other authorities in the Post Office, 
then their demand for separate entrance could be really 
appreciated. But the critics totally ignore the context of the 
demands. Similarly the demand for separate lavatory should be 
viewed in the context of Gandhi’s own experiences in the 
prison. So far as the demand for separate food in jail is 
concerned, one could hardly have any objection to such a 
reasonable demand. Food habits are always governed by 
physical, regional, cultural and even personal considerations. 
That is the reason why even inside the country and community 
different kinds of foods are sought and consumed by different 
people. 


Siby K. Joseph 59 


It is true that Gandhi failed to take up cudgels on behalf 
of African blacks despite his high idealism and concern for the 
downtrodden and the deprived. One may get a clue to why 
Gandhi has not started a joint campaign with Blacks in South 
Africa from a reply to the question raised by Rev. Tema, a 
black African freedom fighter from Johannesburg associated 
with the African National Congress who came to India in 1939 
and sought Gandhi’s guidance on the formation of an Indo- 
African united Non-white Front in South Africa. Gandhi in his 
reply said: “It will be a mistake..... You will be pooling 
together not strength but weakness. You will best help one 
another by each standing on his own legs. The two cases are 
different. The Indians are a microscopic minority. They can 
never be a ‘menace’ to the white population. You, on the other 
hand, are the sons of the soil who are being robbed of your 
inheritance. You are bound to resist that. Yours is a far bigger 
issue. It ought not to be mixed up with that of the Indians. This 
does not preclude the establishment of the friendliest relations 
between the two races. The Indians can co-operate with you in 
a number of ways. They can help you by always acting on the 
square towards you. They may not put themselves in opposition 
to your legitimate aspirations, or run you down as ‘savages’ 
while exalting themselves as ‘cultured’ people, in order to 
secure concessions for themselves at your expense.” It is also 
worth quoting the answer given by Gandhi on the question 
“What sort of relations would you favour between these two 
races?” In his reply Gandhi said: “The closest possible. But 
while I have abolished all distinction between an African and 
an Indian that does not mean that I do not recognize the 
difference between them. The different races of mankind are 


60 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


like different branches of a tree — once we recognize the 
common parent stock from which we are sprung, we realize the 
basic unity of the human family, and there is no room left for 
enmities and unhealthy competition.”> 


According to Nishikant Kolge Gandhi’s concern for the 
British Indians being classed with South African blacks was not 
because he considers them as an inferior race. He does so to 
record his opposition to the classification of British Indians as 
natives of South Africa in order to impose civil disabilities on 
them. However, Kolge admits that one cannot ignore the fact 
that there are a few occasions when Gandhi categorically stated 
that British Indians are undoubtedly infinitely superior to the 
Blacks. He analyses the reasons for such statements of Gandhi 
from a historical perspective. “In the 1890s, South Africa 
comprised four areas. The two British ones were the Cape 
Colony, which was self-governing under the crown; and Natal 
which was a crown colony. The two Boer republics were the 
Transvaal and the Orange Free State. There was severe racial 
discrimination in all these places. The whites considered 
themselves superior. However, it is to be noted that the white 
government was willing to grant civil rights and exempt the 
“educated” and “civilised” Asians and blacks of South Africa 
from racial discrimination. It was in this context that Gandhi 
tried to project the British Indians as being superior to the 
South African blacks. Thus Gandhi was not claiming that the 
British Indians are superior to African blacks, the educated and 
civilised ones. All that he was claiming was that unlike the 
African “savages” and “raw kaffirs” British Indians are eligible 


Siby K. Joseph 61 


for certain kind of civil rights which were given to the 
“educated and civilised” African blacks.” 


Besides, one has to bear in mind the limitations of 
Gandhi and his struggles. He was living in an alien country 
with a limited support base, was a young man, quite a novice 
and inexperienced in the ways of politics. Another point which 
critics have hardly taken into consideration is that all his 
demands arose more from his deep commitment to find 
solutions for the problems faced by Indians in South Africa and 
not so much from disdain or contempt for the African Blacks. 
This also illustrated by the fact that he differentiated between 
Africans and Indians only when he was putting forward the 
demands on behalf of the Indian communities. But in all other 
occasions he was quite cordial and respectful to African Blacks. 


Kolge who analysed the general writings of Gandhi on 
native Africans of South Africa came to the conclusion that he 
was very ‘cordial, respectful and supportive.’ He cited a 
number of quotations to substantiate his argument. Kolge 
wrote: “In 1895, he described the natives of the Trappist 
Mission as “patterns of simplicity, virtue and gentleness” 
(Gandhi 1895, in CWMG 1: 226). In 1896, he writes that Indian 
traders in South Africa “found a very valuable customer in the 
native of South Africa, called Zulu or Kaffir’ (Gandhi 1896, in 
CWMG 2: 32). Inl903, ... Gandhi wrote “they [Native 
Passengers] had paid their fares was no question for him 
[anonymous writer] to consider.” He added “...Native 
passengers had paid first-class fares, they were as much entitled 
as the correspondent himself to travel by that train in a first- 
class carriage” (Gandhi 1903, in CWMG 4: 31). And in 1904 
Gandhi criticised Loveday because” ‘to him [Loveday], 
evidently, the kaffir is an abomination’ and no matter how 


62 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


much advanced he may be in education, he is not fit even to 
walk on the foot-paths” (Gandhi 1904, in CWMG 4: 105). 

In 1905... Gandhi remarked that passing such a drastic byelaw 
was “a matter of painful surprise,” he further added “we should 
be failing in our duty if we did not, in the interests of 
community of South Africa, raise our humble protest against 
them” (Gandhi 1905, in CWMG 4: 347). 

In the same year Gandhi wrote an article on Abraham Lincoln 
in Indian Opinion wherein he wanted the Indians of South 
Africa to recognise the hardships of America’s black slaves 
(Gandhi 1905, in CWMG 5: 50-52). At the end of the same 
year, Gandhi expressed his concern for the blacks of South 
Africa when the Johannesburg Town Council resolved that the 
kaffirs living near the Malay location would be shifted to 
Klipspruit. He wrote: “ we wonder how the Kaffirs will manage 
to live at such distance” (Gandhi 1905, in CWMG 5: 135). 

In 1906, in his weekly journal Indian Opinion he mentioned the 
efforts of an African black Tengo Jabavu, editor of Imvo, to 
create an interstate native college. Gandhi suggested that the 
British Indians of South Africa needed to learn from such an 
example. ... 

In 1907, Gandhi writes about Natal legislators passing a law 
which discriminated against both British Indians and Native 
Africans equally. ... Subsequently in 1908 he wrote, “Asiatic 
prisoners are classed with Natives. I do not object to this...” 
(Gandhi 1908, in CWMG 91: 74). In 1910 .... Gandhi criticised 
Selborne and argued that “their [native of South Africa] sincere 
well wishers, however, should welcome the rise of such 
leaders—the more the better—and encourage them” (Gandhi 
1910, in CWMG 10: 125). In the same year in a letter to M P 
Fancy, he sympathised with the blacks of South Africa when he 
wrote:“I shuddered to read the account of the hardships that the 
Kaffirs had to suffer in the third-class carriages in the Cape and 


Siby K. Joseph 63 


I wanted to experience the same hardships myself ”(Gandhi 
1910, in CWMG 10: 183).”” 
If we read columns of Indian Opinion, we can see such 


quotes. Let me cite what Gandhi wrote in 1905 as an example. 
It gives a fairly good idea of how he looked upon the natives of 
South Africa. “Some members of the British Association in 
England are at present visiting South Africa. They are all 
scientists, and possess great knowledge. This is the first event 
of its kind in South Africa. A few days ago, when they were in 
Natal, the Hon’ble Mr. Marshall Campbell took them to his 
residence at Mount Edgecombe. Here these people were shown 
two things. Firstly, they were shown what the savage Negroes 
were like, and also their dances, etc. They were thereafter 
introduced to educated Kaffirs. Addressing them Mr. Dubey, 
their leader, made a very impressive speech. This Mr. Dubey is 
a Negro of whom one should know. He has acquired through 
his own labours over 300 acres of land near Phoenix. There he 
imparts education to his brethren, teaching them various trades 
and crafts and preparing them for the battle of life. In the 
course of his eloquent speech Mr. Dubey said that the contempt 
with which the Kaffirs were regarded was unjustified. The 
educated among them were better than the uneducated ones, for 
they worked more, and since they had higher standards of life, 
they offered more custom to the merchants. It was unfair to 
burden the Negroes with taxes; also it was like cutting down 
the very branch one was sitting on. The Kaffirs understood and 
performed their duties better than the whites. They worked hard 
and without them the whites could not carry on for a moment. 
They made loyal subjects, and Natal was the land of their birth. 
For them there was no country other than South Africa; and to 


64 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


deprive them of their rights over lands, etc., was like banishing 
them from their home. Mr. Dubey’s speech produced a very 
good impression on the whites, and he suggested to them that, 
if they sympathised with the Negroes, they might help him to 
start a smithy on his farm. The members of the British 
Association subscribed £60 on the spot and presented the sum 
to him. The Hon’ble Mr. Marshall Campbell also made a 
speech on the occasion praising the Kaffirs in Natal and pointed 
out that they were good and useful and that the ill-will shown to 
them was due to misunderstanding and was wrong.” The 
critics of Gandhi totally ignore these statements of Gandhi and 
his deep concern for South African natives. 


After his return from South Africa, even while fighting 
for the freedom of India, Gandhi was concerned about the 
problems of Blacks in Africa and America. It is evident from 
Gandhi’s letter addressed to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 
July 1, 1942. He wrote: “I venture to think that the Allied 
declaration that the Allies are fighting to make the world safe 
for freedom of the individual and for democracy sounds hollow 
so long as India and, for that matter, Africa are exploited by 
Great Britain and America has the Negro problem in her own 
home. But in order to avoid all complications, in my proposal I 
have confined myself only to India. If India becomes free, the 
rest must follow, if it does not happen simultaneously.”? Thus 
his fight in the ultimate analysis was not merely for the 
freedom of India but also of Africa, and America. At this point 
one is tempted to quote Gandhi’s own words “I have not 
conceived my mission to be that of a knight-errant wandering 
everywhere to deliver people from difficult situations. My 


Siby K. Joseph 65 


humble occupation has been to show people how they can solve 
their own difficulties.”'° The subsequent historical 
developments in general and struggle against racial 
discrimination both in South Africa and United States of 
America led by Nelson Mandela and Dr. Martin Luther King 
Jr., go a long way to prove how prophetic were the words of 
Gandhi. All these people successfully fought their own battles 
for human dignity taking Gandhi and his idea of Satyagraha as 
the main source of inspiration for their struggles. This was what 
Gandhi had meant when he said that if his life and work could 
inspire people to struggle for solutions to their problems his 
mission would have been achieved. 


Nelson Mandela despite his being a leader of the Blacks 
greatly appreciated the wider significance and limitations of 
Gandhi’s stay and struggle in South Africa while comparing his 
prison experiences with those of Gandhi in South African 
prison. He said “Gandhi had been initially shocked that Indians 
were classified with Natives in prison; his prejudices were quite 
obvious, but he was reacting not to "Natives", but criminalised 
Natives. He believed that Indians should have been kept 
separately. However, there was an ambivalence in his attitude 
for he stated, ‘It was, however, as well that we were classed 
with the Natives. It was a welcome opportunity to see the 
treatment meted out to Natives, their conditions (of life in 
gaol), and their habits.’ All in all, Gandhi must be forgiven 
those prejudices and judged in the context of the time and the 
circumstances. We are looking here at the young Gandhi, still 
to become Mahatma, when he was without any human 


prejudice, save that in favour of truth and justice. ""! 


66 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


The criticism that at the end of Gandhi’s struggle, the 
kind of compromise which came out of it did not help much the 
Indian community particularly its lower strata is not at all 
valid. Such an assessment of Gandhi’s struggle and work in 
South Africa comes more out of prejudices and deliberate 
distortions on the part of the critics. They also forget that a 
Satyagrahi never indulges in a fight to the finish. His primary 
attempt is to draw out the humane qualities of other party and 
make it to go on a joint mission of search for truth and 
reasonableness. The last settlement entered and accepted by 
Gandhi should be viewed in the light of the general principle of 
Satyagraha. Besides, there is no denying the fact that in some 
way or other every section of Indian community including the 
poor and the deprived derived some benefits from the final 
settlement. 


Let us consider the point that Gandhi was a British 
loyalist. It is true that, he himself underlines this fact on several 
occasions and tried to help them both in Boer War and Zulu 
rebellion. But one should not forget that he was never inspired 
by Pax Britannica. Rather he was more inspired by other 
thinkers of the West who were themselves very critical of 
industrial civilization, the main stay of the British Empire. 
Besides, it was while resisting racial discrimination and White 
supremacy that a metamorphosis of his personality took place 
and he emerged as a man with great moral and ethical values. 
He also derived great inspiration from the sufferings of the 
Zulus,which also helped him to formulate the principles of 
Satyagraha and Bramacharya as mentioned earlier. His 
occasional support to the British was a result of his deep sense 


Siby K. Joseph 67 


of responsibility as their subject and the democratic tradition 
which govern the British society back home. In his statement in 
the course of his trail in 1922 he fully explained and underlined 
the point how he turned out to be a rebel from being a 
loyalist.!* (See Appendix-I) The moment he realized that the so 
called democratic values are not meant for the weaker races of 
the world, he raised his powerful voice against it and fought 
vigorously till the end. 


This analysis helps one to understand the truth behind 
the major criticisms raised against him to prove that he was a 
racist, he used Aryan blood line theory to get benefits from the 
British administration and so on. The critics also use the 
present standards to evaluate a historical person like Gandhi, 
who was the product of a particular time and circumstances. 
The uniqueness of his personality lies in the fact that he went 
far beyond his time in his approach to issues related to race, 
caste, colour and creed in comparison to his contemporaries. 


Notes and References 


1. Joseph Lelyveld, Great Soul: Mahatma Gandhi and His 
Struggle With India,(New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2011). 


2. CWMG, Vol. 1, pp. 305-6. 
3. The net version of the book is available on the site: 
http://www.dankalia.com/literature/frc200.htm 


4. "Kaffirs". Encyclopedia Britannica. Vol.15, 1911. pp. 627— 
629. An online version is available on the site: 
https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection- 
90100/compilation-of-published- 
sources ?itemId=34463674&action=showRecord#fullscreen 


5. M. K. Gandhi, Harijan, 18-2-1939. 


68 


Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


. See Nishikant Kolge “Was Gandhi a Racist” Economic & 


Political Weekly, January 30, 2016, Vol. 51, No. 5,p.91. 


. Ibid. p.90 


8. M. K. Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 2-9-1905. 


12. 


. file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Personal/My %20Docu 


ments/Downloads/2074_GandhiRooseveltLetter%20(1).pdf 


. M. K. Gandhi, Harijan, 28-6-1942. 
11. 


Nelson Mandela, Gandhi the Prisoner. 
http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/speechnm1.htm 


See the Statement made by Gandhi before C. N. Broomfield, 
District and Sessions Judge, Ahmedabad on March 18, 1922. 


Chapter-4 
The Racist Identity of Gandhi: An Assessment 


In order to remove misconceptions about Gandhi’s 
approach to race and racial discrimination it would be quite 
expedient to analyse some of the citations which were widely 
discussed and quoted in the print and electronic media in the 
wake of installation of Gandhi statue in Ghana and the effort of 
Indian government to install a Gandhi bust in Malawi. 


a. Opposition to the installation of Gandhi statue in Ghana 


As stated earlier, the main argument raised for the 
removal of Gandhi statue in Ghana was his ‘racist identity.’ It 
would be interesting to analyse the six quotes the petitioners 
had cited to substantiate their claim for the removal of Gandhi 
statue in Ghana. They culled out these quotes from the online 
edition of the Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi (CWMG). 


The first citation they highlighted is a part of an “Open 
Letter” Gandhi wrote in December, 1894 to the Hon. Members 
of the Legislative Council and the Legislative Assembly. The 
citation is as follows: “A general belief seems to prevail in the 
Colony that the Indians are little better, if at all, than savages or 
the Natives of Africa. Even the children are taught to believe in 
that manner, with the result that the Indian is being dragged 
down to the position of a raw Kaffir.” -CWMG, Vol. I, p. 193. 


70 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


In the very beginning of the Open letter, Gandhi 
explains the very purpose of the letter. He wrote: “The one and 
only object is to serve India, which is by accident of birth 
called my native country, and to bring about better 
understanding between the European section of the community 
and the Indian in this Colony.” When Gandhi wrote about “a 
general belief ” as cited by the petitioners for the removal of 
Gandhi statue, it is clear that Gandhi was not giving his 
personal opinion, as the petitioners seem to believe; rather he 
was referring to the general belief prevailing among the people 
in South Africa. A close perusal of Gandhi’s “Open Letter” 
would reveal that the basic attempt of Gandhi was not to 
denigrate the natives of Africa, but he was trying to build up a 
case for better treatment of people of Indian origin in South 
Africa as they are as good as any group of Anglo Saxons 
anywhere in the world. He makes various references to 
authoritative scholars and philosophers like Sir W.W. Hunter, 
Max Muller, Schopenhauer, Sir H. S. Maine and others to 
substantiate his assertion. 


The second quote is also a part of the “Open Letter” of 
Gandhi, in which he cites from an article from the Cape Times 
of April 13, 1889. “In the face, too, of financial operations, the 
success of which many of their detractors would envy, one fails 
to understand the agitation which would place the operators in 
the same category as the half-heathen Native and confine him 
to Locations, and subject him to the harsher laws by which the 
Transvaal Kaffir is governed.” -CWMG, Vol. I, pp. 224-225. 
The petitioners took the citations from the Cape Times which 
Gandhi had referred and presented it as a part of Gandhi’s own 


Siby K. Joseph 71 


writing which is equivalent to putting words into Gandhi’s 
mouth. 


The third quotation cited by the petitioners “So far as 
the feeling has been expressed, it is to degrade the Indian to the 
position of the Kaffir’ is a part of the petition of British 
Indians residing in the South African Republic addressed to 
Lord Ripon in May 1895 and not of Gandhi. In the very 
beginning of the petition, it describes who the petitioners are. 
They consist of traders, shopkeepers? assistants, hawkers, 
cooks, waiters, or labourers, scattered over the whole of the 
Transvaal, though the greatest number is settled in 
Johannesburg and Pretoria. The petitioners argue that in the 
Transvaal colony, there was a concerted and deliberate attempt 
to malign and discriminate against the Indians. It was quite in 
contrast to the kind of respectable treatment which Indians 
were being given in other parts of South Africa. To support the 
contention they refer to the more dignified opinion about the 
Indians even among a section of European people. The 
particular reference, that is, “to degrade the Indian to the 
position of the Kaffir” was just an attempt to ask for a better 
treatment for them in Transvaal colony. 


The fourth quotation given by the petitioners of Ghana 
was from a speech delivered by Gandhi at a public meeting 
held at Bombay under the auspices of the Bombay Presidency 
Association at the Framji Cowasji Institute on September 26, 
1896. The citation is as follows: “Ours is one continual 
struggle against a degradation sought to be inflicted upon us by 
the Europeans, who desire to degrade us to the level of the raw 
Kaffir whose occupation is hunting, and whose sole ambition is 


72 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


to collect a certain number of cattle to buy a wife with and, 
then, pass his life in indolence and nakedness.”- CWMG, Vol. I, 
pp. 409-410. As the text of the speech is not available, what we 
have today in the Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi is 
collated from the reports of the speech published in The Times 
of India and Bombay Gazette. One could not vouchsafe the 
authenticity of a newspaper report. For the sake of argument, 
even if it is granted that he had made such comments he was 
referring to the raw kaffirs and not the general natives of South 
Africa. In every society, there are people who are somewhat 
outside the social system and any comment about them should 
not be taken in a generalized form. 


The fifth quote “Your Petitioner has seen the Location 
intended to be used by the Indians. It would place them, who 
are undoubtedly infinitely superior to the Kaffirs, in close 
proximity to the latter.” — CWMG, Vol. II, p. 270, is from a 
petition addressed to Joseph Chamberlain-Her Majesty’s 
Principal Secretary of State for the Colonies by John Frazer 
Parker of Pretoria in 1899. This has nothing to do with Gandhi 
except that there is a reference to it in his “Open Letter” 
referred to earlier. One may wonder why the petitioners of 
Ghana demanding the removal of Gandhi statue would even 
refer to it. 


The last quote “The Boer Government insulted the 
Indians by classing them with the Kaffirs.” - CWMG, Vol. V, p. 
59” is from Indian Opinion of January 6, 1906. It refers to 
Indians in the Orange River Colony ordinances in the 
Government Gazette which carried a definition of “coloured 
people” to include Indians. The British Indian Association 


Siby K. Joseph 73 


protested against the definition of the term “coloured person” in 
certain draft ordinances. In response to representation from the 
British Indian Association, Lord Selborne justified the 
definition of “coloured person” on the ground that it was a 
legacy from the old Government. In response to it Gandhi 
wrote in Indian Opinion: “But British Indians object to the 
definition for that very reason. Their position is this. The 
ordinances will not in practice apply to them. The Boer 
Government insulted the Indians by classing them with the 
Kaffirs. Now there is no occasion to perpetuate a needless 
insult. The argument seems to be unanswerable. It is a pity that 
His Excellency, in spite of his wish not to offend, has not seen 
his way to grant the very reasonable request of the 
Association.” By including Indians in the definition of colured 
persons along with the natives of South Africa, Indians will 
lose the privileges they have as British subjects. Hence the 
statement that the Boer government insulted the Indians by 
classing them with the kaffirs. 


b. Opposition to the installation of Gandhi bust in Malawi 


In the case of Malawi Gandhi bust installation also, the 
petitioners have cited some statements of Gandhi in order to 
show that he had contempt for the black African race. The 
petition argues that “when the British required Indians and 
Africans to carry passports in South Africa,’ Gandhi 
commented: “Indians are hard working people, they should not 
be required to carry these things. But, black people are kaffirs, 
losers and they are lazy, yes, they can carry their passport but 
why should we do that?” 


74 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


In spite of an intensive search, a valid source of this 
citation from Gandhiana could not be identified. It seems that 
this quote was taken from the speech of Indian American writer 
Sujatha Gidla and author of Ant Among Elephants: An 
Untouchable Family and The Making of Modern India on 
January 29, 2018 at the Jaipur Literature Festival.' 


Their second argument is that Gandhi did not approve 
of Indian men having relations with African women. To 
substantiate their claim they cite the following “Some Indians 
do have contacts with Kaffir women. I think such contacts are 
fraught with grave danger. Indians would do well to avoid them 
altogether.” Without reading the preceding paragraph one may 
feel Gandhi is talking the language of a racist. Therefore, the 
whole paragraph is given below in order to have a clear idea of 
Gandhi’s position. “The whites have been giving strange 
evidence before the Commission that is going into this subject. 
They say that the presence of Indians in the Location is a 
source of annoyance to them, that Indians are immoral, that 
they harass girls, making unseemly gestures at them, and that 
they corrupt the morals of the Kaffirs. Many such offensive 
things were said in the course of the evidence. It is imperative 
for the Indian settlers to offer evidence to counter this. The 
Krugersdorp Indians must get ready to meet the situation. If, 
moreover, there is substance in any of these charges, such 
habits must be corrected. Some Indians do have contacts with 
Kaffir women. I think such contacts are fraught with grave 
danger. Indians would do well to avoid them altogether.” It is 
clear that statement of Gandhi was against the complaint that 
Indians are immoral and they corrupt morals of Kafirs. 


Siby K. Joseph 75 


Gandhi’s whole struggle was based on morality and he was not 
in a position to support when some people engaged in immoral 
acts. 


The third argument is that Gandhi “did not like the idea 
that Africans and Indians were given the same entrance at 
work. He actually fought for Indians to have their separate 
entrance away from Africans: We felt the indignity too much 
and ... petitioned the authorities to do away with the invidious 
distinction, and they have now provided three separate 
entrances for natives, Asiatics and Europeans.” This passage is 
culled out from a pamphlet? viz. “The Grievances of the 
British Indians in South Africa : An Appeal to The Indian 
Public” dated August 14,1896. The case of separate entrance 
was not at any work place. Here also the references to the 
humiliation or insults heaped on Indians have been removed so 
as to give an impression that the demand of the Natal Indian 
Congress for separate entrance was on racial grounds. From 
the report of the NIC in August 1895, it is clear that “a 
correspondence was carried on by the late President with the 
Government in connection with the separate entrances for the 
Europeans and Natives and Asiatics at the Post Office.” The 
original petition of NIC in this regard is not available for cross 
verification to have a clear idea about the matter. The full 
citation in the Green pamphlet is as follows:“In the Durban 
Post and Telegraph Offices, there were separate entrances for 
natives and Asiatics and Europeans. We felt the indignity too 
much and many respectable Indians were insulted and called all 
sorts of names by the clerks at the counter. We petitioned the 
authorities to do away with the invidious distinction and they 


76 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


have now provided three separate entrances for natives, 
Asiatics and Europeans.” 


One can accept for argument sake that some of the 
comments made by Gandhi about the blacks of South Africa 
may not be in tune with our times. But any text should be 
related to the historical context and circumstances in which it 
was formulated. The best way to misinterpret any comment or 
text is to take it out of context and judge it by applying 
reductionist approach from the present standards. This is 
exactly what is done by these groups. Moreover it should not be 
forgotten that most of these comments refer to the early phase 
of Gandhi’s life in South Africa when he along with the Indian 
people were the worst victims of racial discrimination. He not 
only had to mobilise the Indian people but also the enlightened 
section of British public opinion to fight the menace of racial 
discrimination. So it was a part of his tactical line to move 
closer to a section of supporters to intensify the struggle. Thus 
his final gaze was on the struggle and not making wily 
comments on the natives. 


Notes and References 


1. https://www.indiatoday.in/pti-feed/story/gandhi-was-casteist- 
and-racist-us-based-writer-sujatha-gidla-1156547-2018-01-29 

2. Indian Opinion, 12-2-1910. 

3. This pamphlet which later became known as the Green 
Pamphlet on account of the colour of its cover. 


Chapter-5 


Citations of Gandhi by Obadele 
Kambon with Relevant Text 


In the last chapter, we have seen some of the citations of 
Gandhi raised by the opponents in the course of their arguments 
for the removal of Gandhi statue in Ghana and in opposition to 
the installation of Gandhi bust in Malawi. In this series, 
Obadele Kambon wrote an article in The Print viz. “Ram 
Guha is wrong. Gandhi went from a racist young man to a 
racist middle-aged man.”! with a number of citations of 
Gandhi to back the claim that he was a racist. 


In this chapter, the quotations of Gandhi which 
Obadele Kambon used for his article in the Print to show that 
Gandhi was a thorough going racist is presented in italics and 
within brackets. This is followed by the relevant texts from The 
Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi (CWMG), from which the 
quotations were taken. This will help the reader to understand 
the context of Gandhi’s statements and know better the 
meaning of citations which appear offensive at the first sight. It 
is to be noted that many of the quotations are from Gandhi’s 
writings on his experiences at jails. As in the case of 
petitioners for the removal of Gandhi statue in Ghana here also 
some of the statements of L. W. Ritch and Mahomed Khan are 
presented as Gandhi’s own. Besides, certain parts of some of 
the citations were deleted or slightly changed to bolster the 
argument that Gandhi was a racist. 


78 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


[ 22 May, 1906 

“It was a gross injustice to seek to place Indians in the same 
class as the Kaffirs.”’| 

The Indian Deputation before the Constitution Committee 
On the Chairman’s wanting to know more about the problem, 
Mr. Gandhi gave a full account of the difficulties relating to the 
use of trams and added that there was another difficulty which 
caused greater harassment to the Indians: they were not only 
denied the right to purchase land, but they could not hold it in 
their own names even for religious purposes. Constant 
difficulties were experienced in the matter of transferring such 
lands in Pretoria, Johannesburg, Heidelberg and other places. It 
was a gross injustice to seek to place Indians in the same class 
as the Kaffirs. There were a number of laws in the Transvaal in 
which the term “Native” did not cover the Indian. 

[CWMG , Vol.5, pp.225-226] 


[26 May, 1906 

Thanks to the Court’s decision, only clean Indians or Coloured 
people other than Kaffirs can now travel by the trams. ”] 

The Tram Case 

The discussion on the matter is still going on. The Town 
Council has not yet answered the question put to it by Mr. 
Lane. Mr. Gandhi has addressed a letter on the subject to the 
Leader to the following effect. You say that the Magistrate’s 
decision is unsatisfactory, because it would enable a person, 
however unclean, to travel by a tram and that even the Kaffirs 
would be able to do so. But the Magistrate’s decision is quite 
different. The Court has declared that the Kaffirs have no legal 
right to travel by the trams. And, according to tram regulations, 
those in an unclean dress or in a drunken state are prohibited 
from boarding a tram. Thanks to the Court’s decision, only 
clean Indians or Coloured people other than Kaffirs can now 


Siby K. Joseph 79 


travel by the trams. But even this victory that we have achieved 
has been snatched away from us by the Council in an indecent 
manner. For, while the Magistrate gave his decision on Friday, 
on Saturday appeared the news in the Government Gazette that 
the Town Council had withdrawn the tram regulations. This 
means that an Indian will no more be able to file a suit under 
the bye-laws; and the Council may perhaps be under the 
impression that the Smallpox Act of 1897 will now apply to 
Indians. It has been a common belief that the British people 
never stab anyone in the back. But I feel-and other tax-payers 
must also feel the same-that the Town Council has stabbed the 
Indian community in the back. 

You express sorrow at the decision in the case; but, even apart 
from the instances mentioned by me, there is nothing to be 
sorry for, at least for the present. But do you approve of the 
crooked way in which the Council has brought about this 
result? Now commences the third stage of the tram case. 
[CWMG, Vol.5, pp.235-236] 


[6 November, 1906 ? 

“Boer leaders [...] should not consider Indians as being on the 
same level as Kaffirs.”’] 

Deputation Notes - II 

Interviews with Leaders: Sympathy and Promise of Help 
The last week has been very busy. We have had not a 
moment’s leisure. We saw Mr. Theodore Morison of Aligarh 
and the well-known Mr. Stead of the Review of Reviews. Mr. 
Stead has boldly come out to give us all the help he can. He 
was therefore requested to write to the Boer leaders that they 
should not consider Indians as being on the same level as 
Kaffirs.” [CWMG, Vol. VI, p. 112] 


80 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


[16 November, 1906 

“[T]he Boer mind [...] refused to recognize the evident and 
sharp distinctions that undoubtedly exist between British 
Indians and the Kaffir races in South Africa.” 

Letter to W. T. Stead 

Dear Sir, 

As you were good enough to show very great sympathy with 
the cause of British Indians in the Transvaal, may I suggest 
you’re using your influence with the Boer leaders in the 
Transvaal? I feel certain that they did not share the same 
prejudice against British Indians as against the Kaffir races but 
as the prejudice against Kaffir races in a strong form was in 
existence in the Transvaal at the time when the British Indians 
immigrated there, the latter were immediately lumped together 
with the Kaffir races and described under the generic term 
“Coloured people”. Gradually the Boer mind was habituated to 
this qualification and it refused to recognize the evident and 
sharp distinctions that undoubtedly exist between British 
Indians and the Kaffir races in South Africa. If you were to 
place this position before them in your own graphic style and 
show to them that British Indians have an ancient civilization 
behind them, that they do not aspire to any political power in 
the Transvaal, that they are a mere handful, i.e., 13,000, and 
that further immigration can easily be regulated without 
accentuating class difference, I have no doubt that some at least 
of the Boer leaders would listen to you and give effect to your 
suggestions. The Indian community in the Transvaal will feel 
deeply grateful to you if you could see your way to influence 
the Boer mind in the direction I have ventured to suggest to 
you. [CWMG, Vol. VI, pp.95-96] 


[July 3, 1907 
“Kaffirs are as a rule uncivilised — the convicts even more so. 


Siby K. Joseph 81 


They are troublesome, very dirty and live almost like animals. 
[...] The reader can easily imagine the plight of the poor 
Indian thrown into such company!”’] 

My Experience In Gaol[-I] 

It was, however, as well that we were classed with the Natives. 
It was a welcome opportunity to study the treatment meted out 
to Natives, their conditions [of life in gaol] and their habits. 
Looked at from another point of view, it did not seem right to 
feel bad about being bracketed with them. At the same time, it 
is indubitably right that Indians should have separate cells. The 
cells for Kaffirs were adjacent to ours. They used to make a 
frightful din in their cells as also in the adjoining yard. We 
were given a separate ward because we were sentenced to 
simple imprisonment; otherwise we would have been in the 
same ward [with the Kaffirs]. Indians sentenced to hard labour 
are in fact kept with the Kaffirs. Apart from whether or not this 
implies degradation, I must say it is rather dangerous. Kaffirs 
are as a rule uncivilised—the convicts even more so. They are 
troublesome, very dirty and live almost like animals. Each ward 
contains nearly 50 to 60 of them. They often started rows and 
fought among themselves. The reader can easily imagine the 
plight of the poor Indian thrown into such company! 

[CWMG, Vol. VIII, pp.198-199] 


[12 July, 1907 

“If registration is made compulsory, there will be no difference 
between Indians and Kaffirs...”’] 

Ritch’s Services 

Not all Indians, perhaps, have a full idea of the tireless pains 
taken by Mr. Ritch in England for their benefit. Recently, he 
has placed the Indians under a further obligation by publishing 
a brief pamphlet which gives a vivid account of the hardships 
of Indians in the Transvaal. Every Indian knows that Mr. 


82 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Ritch’s services are invaluable. He has compressed the whole 
account into a pamphlet of twenty-three pages (octavo size); it 
is a succinct statement, covering the whole ground and giving 
the history as from 1885. It is not only through the efforts of 
Mr. Ritch that we stand to gain; his position also counts. That is 
to say, a veteran white colonist of eighteen years standing like 
Mr. Ritch taking up the struggle on behalf of the rights of 
Indians can have a more powerful effect on the white people. It 
is for this reason that he has referred to this fact in the preface 
to his pamphlet. The vast amount of information which he has 
compressed into such a small pamphlet shows the anxious 
labour bestowed on his work by Mr. Ritch. 

Mr. Ritch has done the right thing in recalling the promises 
given to the Indian community by Lord Milner in the year 
1903. Lord Milner had said then: 

Once on the register, their position is established and no further 
registration is necessary, nor is a fresh permit required. That 
registration gives you a right to be here, and a right to come and 
go. 

Mr. Ritch has compared compulsory and voluntary registration 
in order to point out the difference between the two. Voluntary 
regist ration would be devoid of the sting of compulsion, and 
would constitute an act of grace performed by the Asiatic 
community in deference to white sentiment. If registration is 
made compulsory, there will be no difference between Indians 
and Kaffirs, and the neighbouring Colony will be tempted to 
adopt it as a precedent. It may also turn out to be a prelude to 
compulsory segregation in Coloured Locations. 

Mr. Ritch has not endeavoured to argue the question, but has 
relied upon facts, which he has marshalled so as to lead the 
reader to the irresistible conclusion that the Indian case is just. 
As has been pointed out by Mr. Ritch at the end of the 
pamphlet, the inconsistency between pre-war promises and 


Siby K. Joseph 83 


post-war performance exposes the Government’s perfidy. In 
Mr. Ritch’s own words: 

Apart from the duty, of the Transvaal Government to protect 
the interests of a wholly unrepresented minority, there is the 
obligation of the Transvaal to subordinate merely local interests 
to the welfare of the Empire at large. Let the whites only 
consider to what extent the authority and prestige of the 
Imperial Government have been endangered by their heaping of 
indignity upon indignity upon representatives of the three 
hundred millions of Indians for the sake of a quarter of a 
million whites. 

Mr. Ritch’s pamphlet will enable the whites in England and 
elsewhere to consider the Indian point of view on the Transvaal 
question. That will be a very important gain for the Indian 
community. We are thus putting up a strong fight, and it seems 
that even negotiations for a compromise have started; in view 
of this, it should hardly be necessary for us to add that we 
expect every Indian to remain firm and, guarding himself 
against any trap that the Government may lay, boldly to hold 
himself ready for imprisonment.[CWMG. Vol. VII, pp.394-95] 


[12 December, 1907 

“The Indian of the Transvaal [...] is indiscriminately dubbed 
‘coolie.’ One hears even in official circles such expressions as 
‘coolie lawyer,’ ‘coolie doctor,’ ‘coolie merchant.’ His women 
are ‘coolie Marys. [...] 

He is even denied the not always obvious privilege of riding in 
the same municipal tramcars and Government railway 
carriages as his white fellow-colonists. His children are 
afforded no facilities for education except they attend the 
schools set apart for Kaffirs.”] ° 


84 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


British Indians and The Transvaal 

L. W. Ritch 

As to the plea that the Indian will not blend with the rest of the 
community, what is this but a re-statement of the old fable of 
the boy who stoned the toad as a punishment for its being a 
toad? The Indian of the Transvaal a branded a pariah by statute; 
he is treated as such in practice; regardless of the obvious 
terminological inexactitude, he is indiscriminately dubbed 
“coolie”. One hears even in official circles such expressions as 
“coolie lawyer”, “coolie doctor’, “coolie merchant’. His 
women are “coolie Marys”. As has been already shown, he is 
accorded no place in the scheme of things, save on sufferance. 
He may not even own fixed property, although, curiously, he 
may be a mortgagee of such. He is even denied the not always 
obvious privilege of riding in the same municipal tramcars and 
Government railway carriages as his white fellow-colonists. 
His children are afforded no facilities for education except they 
attend the schools set apart for Kaffirs. Could there be less 
encouragement for the Indian “to blend” and to associate 
himself more closely with the larger life of the community? 
[CWMG. Vol. VIL, pp. 445-446] 


[12 December, 1907 

“Compulsory registration is recognised as signifying nothing 
less than the reduction of British Indians to the status of the 
Kaffir. ”] 4 

British Indians and The Transvaal 

L. W. Ritch 

The difference between this suggested compromise and re- 
registration in terms of the Act cannot but be sufficiently 
obvious. Voluntary registration would be devoid of the sting of 
compulsion, and would constitute an act of grace, performed by 
the Asiatic community in deference to white sentiment, which 


Siby K. Joseph 85 


in course of time might undergo conversion. Compulsory 
registration is recognised as signifying nothing less than the 
reduction of British Indians to the status of the Kaffir; as being 
more than likely of adoption as a precedent for anti-Indian 
legislation by the neighbouring colonies; and as a probable 
prelude to compulsory segregation in coloured locations. 
[CWMG, Vol. VIL, p. 447] 


[2 February, 1908 

“The British rulers take us to be so lowly and ignorant that 
they assume that, like the Kaffirs who can be pleased with toys 
and pins, we can also be fobbed off with trinkets. ”] 

Blue Book 

The Blue book published by Lord Elgin in January is now 
available in South Africa. It is called a Blue book, though it 
should really be called a black book. Anyone who reads this 
Blue book and follows it will soon realize that the Indians’ 
success was in spite of the Imperial Government, which had 
ranged itself on the other side; it was won entirely on the 
strength of truth. It appears that, until January 10, the attitude of 
the Imperial Government was a feeble one. We have seen how 
it changed after that date. But we do not have to be grateful to 
the Imperial Government for that. For them it was a good deed 
done under the stress [of circumstances]. We see from the Blue 
book that, if the Immigrants’[Restriction] Act remains in its 
present form, sub- section 4 of section 2 of the Act2 , as 
interpreted by the Government, will preclude the entry of any 
Indian residing outside the Transvaal. If this interpretation of 
the Act is correct, it is all the more clear how valuable has been 
our success. At the same time we must realize that, if the 
Government’s interpretation of the immigration Act is correct, 
even Indians who pass the education test cannot enter. If the 
Indian community acquits itself well during the [next] three 


86 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


months, this fear will very likely prove to have been without 
basis. For the present, however, the first comment we have to 
make on the Blue book is this: though the immigration Act 
admitted of this insidious interpretation, Lord Elgin acquiesced 
in it. Likewise, he also acquiesced in section 6, which provides 
for the deportation of Indians on the plea of the Asiatic 
[Registration] Act having received Royal assent. The Colonial 
Government should, therefore, be granted the powers required 
to enforce that Act and to deport the satyagrahis. Mr. Morley , 
too, acquiesced in this after some hesitation, being satisfied 
with Mr. Smuts’ assurance given him and Lord Elgin that 
[Indian] Princes and other [dignitaries] would be given the 
necessary permits for visits. The whole affair is as much a 
disgrace to the Indian community as it is to the British Empire. 
The British rulers take us to be so lowly and ignorant that they 
assume that, like the Kaffirs who can be pleased with toys and 
pins, we can also be fobbed off with trinkets. It is a tribute to 
the marvellous power of truth—be it noted by the Indians—that 
our rulers who thought us despicable were forced to change 
their opinion when they saw 200 Indians in gaol. We also learn 
from the same Blue book that the Chinese Consul, having 
raised the question of finger-impressions, found it necessary to 
withdraw it in view of the petition by the Chinese Association, 
and to tell Sir Edward Grey later that the [Chinese] objection 
was really to the Act itself [and not just to the finger- 
impressions]. We earnestly hope that the Indian community 
will not throw away, through a mistaken step or sheer 
thoughtlessness, the success that has been gained after such 
strenuous effort. When we have more time, we shall place 
before our readers the translations of relevant portions of this 
Blue book so that they may have the same picture of it as we 
have in our mind. Meanwhile, the only request we make is that 
they should remember that the movement has a long way to go 
yet and that these three months have been granted to us for 


Siby K. Joseph 87 


finalizing our preparations and sharpening our weapons. If we 
make the mistake of supposing that we cannot again put up the 
same kind of fight, we shall to our regret lose even that which 
we have gained. Those who wish India well must ponder over 
this. They ought not to allow their character patience, 
endurance, generosity, industriousness, etc.—to desert them. 
[CWMG,Vol. VIII, pp.166-167] 


[7 March, 1908 

“Many of the Native prisoners are only one degree removed 
from the animal and often created rows and fought among 
themselves in their cells.” ] 

My Gaol Experiences[-I] 

The cell was situated in the Native quarters and we were 
housed in one that was labelled “For Coloured Debtors”. It was 
this experience for which we were perhaps all unprepared. We 
had fondly imagined that we would have suitable quarters apart 
from the Natives. As it was, perhaps, it was well that we were 
classed with the Natives. We would now be able to study the 
life of Native prisoners, their customs and manners. I felt, too, 
that passive resistance had not been undertaken too soon by the 
Indian community. Degradation underlay the classing of 
Indians with Natives. The Asiatic Act seemed to me to be the 
summit of our degradation. It did appear to me, as I think it 
would appear to any unprejudiced reader, that it would have 
been simple humanity if we were given special quarters. The 
fault did not lie with the gaol authorities. It was the fault of the 
law that has made no provision for the special treatment of 
Asiatic prisoners. Indeed, the Governor of the gaol tried to 
make us as comfortable as he could within the regulations. The 
chief warder, as also the head warder, who was in immediate 
charge of us, completely fell in with the spirit that actuated the 
Governor. But he was powerless to accommodate us beyond 


88 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


the horrible din and the yells of the Native prisoners throughout 
the day and partly at night also. Many of the Native prisoners 
are only one degree removed from the animal and often created 
rows and fought among themselves in their cells. The Governor 
could not separate the very few Indian prisoners (It speaks 
volumes for Indians that among several hundred there were 
hardly half a dozen Indian prisoners.) from the cells occupied 
by the Native prisoners. And yet it is quite clear that separation 
is a physical necessity. So much was the classification of 
Indians and other Asiatics with the Natives insisted upon that 
our jumpers, which being new were not fully marked, had to be 
labelled “N”, meaning Natives. How this thoughtless 
classification has resulted in the Indians being partly starved 
will be clearer when we come to consider the question of food. 
[CWMG, Vol. VIII, pp.182-83] 


[ 3 July,1908 

“We were then marched off to a prison intended for Kaffirs. 
There, our garments were stamped with the letter ‘N,’ which 
meant that we were being classed with the Natives. We were all 
prepared for hardships, but not quite for this experience. We 
could understand not being classed with the whites, but to be 
placed on the same level with the Natives seemed too much to 
put up with.] 

My Experience In Gaol[-I] 

There, our garments were stamped with the letter “N”, which 
meant that we were being classed with the Natives. We were all 
prepared for hardships, but not quite for this experience. We 
could understand not being classed with the whites, but to be 
placed on the same level with the Natives seemed too much to 
put up with. I then felt that Indians had not launched on passive 
resistance too soon. Here was further proof that the obnoxious 


Siby K. Joseph 89 


law was intended to emasculate the Indians. It was, however, as 
well that we were classed with the Natives. 

It was a welcome opportunity to study the treatment meted out 
to Natives, their conditions [of life in gaol] and their habits. 
Looked at from another point of view, it did not seem right to 
feel bad about being bracketed with them. At the same time, it 
is indubitably right that Indians should have separate cells. The 
cells for Kaffirs were adjacent to ours. They used to make a 
frightful din in their cells as also in the adjoining yard. We 
were given a separate ward because we were sentenced to 
simple imprisonment; otherwise we would have been in the 
same ward [with the Kaffirs]. Indians sentenced to hard labour 
are in fact kept with the Kaffirs.|[CWMG, Vol. VIII, p. 198] 


[21 March, 1908 

“There is nothing for it but to let ourselves be classed with the 
Kaffirs and starve.’’| 

My Experience in Gaol [-ITI] 

While on the subject of food, it will be instructive to compare 
[the Indian] with the European scale. For breakfast, they get 
porridge with eight ounces of bread. For dinner, again, bread, 
together with soup or meat with potatoes or green vegetables, 
and for supper, bread and porridge. That is, Europeans get 
bread thrice a day, so that it makes no difference whether or not 
they get porridge. Moreover, they are served either meat or 
soup as an additional item every day. Over and above these 
they are given tea or cocoa every afternoon. It is thus clear that 
both Kaffirs and Europeans get food suited to their tastes. The 
poor Indians—nobody bothers about them! They cannot get the 
food they want. If they are given European diet, the whites will 
feel insulted. In any case, why should the gaol authorities 
bother to find out the normal Indian fare? There is nothing for it 
but to let ourselves be classed with the Kaffirs and starve. 
[CWMG, Vol. VIII, pp. 218-19] 


90 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


[16 January, 1909 

“I observed with regret that some Indians were happy to sleep 
in the same room as the Kaffirs [...] We may entertain no 
aversion to Kaffirs, but we cannot ignore the fact that there is 
no common ground between them and us in the daily affairs of 
life.’”| 

My Second Experience In Gaol [-IT]] 

As soon as we rose the following day, I was taken to where the 
other prisoners were lodged, so that I had no chance to 
complain to the Governor about what had happened. I have, 
though, resolved in my mind on an agitation to ensure that 
Indian prisoners are not lodged with Kaffirs or others. When I 
arrived at the place, there were about 15 Indian prisoners. 
Except for three, all of them were satyagrahis. The three were 
charged with other offences. These prisoners were generally 
lodged with Kaffirs. When I reached there, the chief warder 
issued an order that all of us should be lodged in a separate 
room. I observed with regret that some Indians were happy to 
sleep in the same room as the Kaffirs, the reason being that they 
hoped there for a secret supply of tobacco, etc. This is a matter 
of shame to us. We may entertain no aversion to Kaffirs, but we 
cannot ignore the fact that there is no common ground between 
them and us in the daily affairs of life. Moreover, those who 
wish to sleep in the same room with them have ulterior motives 
for doing so. Obviously, we ought to abandon such notions if 
we want to make progress. 

[CWMG, Vol. IX, p. 257] 


[23 January, 1909 

“[T] here was urgent need for separate lavatories for Indians. I 
also told him that Indian prisoners should never be lodged with 
Kaffirs. The Governor immediately issued an order for a 
lavatory for Indians to be sent on from the Central Gaol.”] 


Siby K. Joseph 91 


My Second Experience In Gaol [-I'V] 

I had one further unpleasant experience in the Johannesburg 
Gaol. In this gaol, there are two different kinds of wards. One 
ward is for Kaffir and Indian prisoners sentenced to hard 
labour. The other is for prisoners who are called as witnesses 
and those who have been sentenced to imprisonment in civil 
proceedings. Prisoners sentenced to hard labour have no right 
to go into this second ward. We slept in it, but we could not use 
its lavatory as of right. In the first ward, the number of 
prisoners wanting the use of the lavatory is so large that a visit 
to it is a great nuisance. Some Indians find this a source of great 
inconvenience. I was one of them. I was told by the warder that 
there would be no harm in my using a lavatory in the second 
ward. I therefore went to one of the lavatories in this ward. At 
these lavatories, too, there is usually a crowd. Moreover, the 
lavatories have open access. There are no doors. As soon as I 
had occupied one of them, there came along a strong, heavily- 
built, fearful-looking Kaffir. He asked me to get out and started 
abusing me. I said I would leave very soon. Instantly he lifted 
me up in his arms and threw me out. Fortunately, I caught hold 
of the door-frame, and saved myself from a fall. I was not in 
the least frightened by this. I smiled and walked away; but one 
or two Indian prisoners who saw what had happened started 
weeping. Since they could not offer any help in gaol, they felt 
helpless and miserable. I heard later that other Indians also had 
to go through similar tribulations. I acquainted the Governor 
with what had happened and told him there was urgent need for 
separate lavatories for Indians. I also told him that Indian 
prisoners should never be lodged with Kaffirs. The Governor 
immediately issued an order for a lavatory for Indians to be 
sent on from the Central Gaol. Thus, from the next day the 
difficulty about lavatories disappeared. As for myself, I had no 
motions for four days, and hence I suffered in health somewhat. 
[CWMG, Vol. IX, pp.269-70] 


92 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


[30 January, 1909 

“First, why should we bear such hardships, submit ourselves, 
for instance, to the restrictions of gaol life, wear coarse and 
ungainly dress, eat food which is hardly food, starve ourselves, 
suffer being kicked by the warder, live among the Kaffirs [...] 
Better die than suffer this...”’] 

My Second Experience In Gaol [-V] 

What I Read In Gaol 

Though the entire day is taken up with work, one can find time 
for some reading in the mornings and evenings, as also on 
Sundays and, since there is nothing else to tax one’s attention in 
gaol, it is possible to read with a peaceful mind. Though I had 
limited time on my hand, I managed ot read two books by the 
great Ruskin, the essays of the great Thoreau, some portions of 
the Bible, life of Garibaldi (in I Gujarati), essays of Lord Bacon 
(in Gujarati), and two other books about India. We can find the 
doctrine of satyagraha in the writings of Ruskin and Thoreau. 
The Gujarati books were sent by Mr. Diwan for all of us to 
read. Apart from these works, I read the Bhagavad Gita almost 
every day. All this reading had the effect of confirming my 
belief in satyagraha, and I can say today that life in gaol is not 
in the least boring. 

Two Attitudes 

We can take two different attitudes to what I have written 
above. First, why should we bear such hardships, submit 
ourselves, for instance, to the restrictions of gaol life, wear 
coarse and ungainly dress, eat food which is hardly food, starve 
ourselves, suffer being kicked by the warder, live among the 
Kaffirs, do every kind of work, whether we like it or not, obey a 
warder who is only good enough to be our servant, be unable to 
receive any friends or write letters, go without things that we 
may need, and sleep in company with robbers and thieves? 
Better die than suffer this. Better pay the fine than go to gaol. 


Siby K. Joseph 93 


Let no one be punished with gaol. Such an attitude will make a 
man quite weak and afraid of imprisonment, and he will 
achieve nothing good by being in gaol. Alternatively, one may 
consider oneself fortunate to be in gaol in the cause of the 
motherland, in defence of one’s honour and one’s religion. 
Gaol life, one may think,involves no [real] suffering. Outside, 
one has to carry out the will of many, whereas one has only the 
warder to reckon with in gaol. One has no anxieties in gaol, no 
problem of earning one’s livelihood, no worry about getting 
one’s bread, for that is provided regularly by others. One’s 
person is protected by the Government. None of these things 
has to be paid for. By way of exercise, one gets ample work to 
do and, without any effort on one’s part, all of one’s bad habits 
fall away. The mind enjoys a sense of freedom. One has ready 
to hand the benefit of being absorbed in devotions to God. The 
body is held in bondage, but the soul grows more free. One is 
in full enjoyment of the use of one’s limbs. The body is looked 
after by those who hold it in bondage. Thus, from every point 
of view, one is free. One might, perhaps, be in difficulties, be 
manhandled by a wicked warder, but then one learns to be 
patient. One feels glad to have an opportunity of dissuading 
[him] from such behaviour. It is up to us to adopt such an 
attitude and think of gaol as a holy and happy place and to 
make it such. In short, happiness and misery are states of the 
mind. I hope that the reader, after reading this account of my 
second experience [in gaol], will resolve in his mind that his 
only happiness will be in going to gaol for the sake of the 
motherland or his religion, in submitting himself to the 
suffering involved in it, or bearing hardships in other ways. 
[CWMG, Vol. IX, .pp.291-93] 


[19 July, 1909 
“We were locked up with the Kaffirs. There was not a single 


94 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


European officer who described us as Indians. We were called 
“sammies ” or “coolies” |’ 

Extract 

Translation from a Letter received by Mr. Gandhi from 
Mr. Mahomed Khan at Johannesburg, 

I was discharged on the 12th July last. The only regret I had 
was that I could not meet you in the gaol. The day I was 
admitted I asked the chief warder to let me see you, but he did 
not grant the permission. I was kept in the ‘reserve camp’ 
which has been established only lately. There was much 
suffering there. The water supply was not sufficient. There was 
no bathing facility. I had hardly a bath during the two months I 
was in the prison. 

I complained to the officer. He said: “Are you blind? Do you 
not see that there is no bathroom here? ” I then said: “What are 
prisoners to do if there is no bathroom for a year? ” He then 
said: “They have to do without.” 

The food supply was also not enough. Moreover, on Saturdays, 
when the prisoners have to wash their towels, socks, etc., there 
was only one tank among 200. I received no ghee (clarified 
butter). They mixed fat with rice, which I did not eat. I 
complained about it, but my complaint went unheeded. I drew 
the attention of the chief warder to the fact that you had 
complained about absence of ghee, and the chief warder said 
that, as you were not able to eat enough because of the want of 
ghee, you were told that other Indian prisoners also would be 
supplied with ghee, in order to induce you to take your food. 
You know the disposition of the Governor of the gaol and the 
chief warder. When we have to complain, they do not tarry 
long enough to listen to it. Later, I received food according to 
the new scale. The latter also is not sufficient. Four ounces of 
bread were allowed, but I never felt that I had more than two 
ounces. Gruel is only gruel in name because it is all water, and, 
then, it is too little. From the bread, rice, vegetables etc., 


Siby K. Joseph 95 


supplied, the Native prisoners working in the yard steal a great 
deal. The quantity of rice allowed was six ounces, but hardly 
three ounces were received by me. I believe that about fifteen 
dishes full of food are stolen by the Kaffirs and the warders say 
nothing. Moreover, the warders are abusive. I put up with all 
this silently. 

The work was not extra heavy. I was taken with a span 
consisting of 32 men to Lord Selborne’s bungalow. There we 
had to do grasscutting, roller-turning, digging, stone-breaking, 
cutting, trees, cleaning ground, and also watering trees. Of this 
work, digging alone was somewhat difficult, because it was all 
stony; the stone was, moreover, very hard. The garden was 
situated on a rise. We were locked up with the. Kaffirs. There 
was not a single European officer who described us as Indians. 
We were called “sammies” or “coolies”. Most of the warders 
were Dutch; some of them were youngsters, who had no 
knowledge of the work. 

At length came 74 Madras Indians. They were in very great 
distress; they are suffering much. Among them are five very 
old men, over perhaps sixty. They could not walk well. These 
also are sent out to work early in the morning in a shivering 
condition, and as the tramp is long, they, poor fellows, get tired, 
and yet they utter not a word of complaint. Therein lies their 
bravery.[CWMG, Vol. X, pp.33-4] 


[8 October, 1909 

“We do not get there the food that we are used to, and are 
classified with the Kaffirs.”’| 

Letter to “Gujarati Punch” 

You have requested me to write something for the Special 
Diwali Number. 

My life is taken up at present by one single thing—the life- 
anddeath struggle for the fulfilment of the pledge taken by the 


96 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Indians living in the Transvaal in South Africa. The pledge was 
taken by thousands of poor Indians—Hindus, Muslims, Parsis, 
Pubjabis, Bengalis, Madrasis, Gujaratis and others—to uphold 
India’s honour. A tiny country like the Transvaal refuses entry 
even to a person like the Dada (Dadabhai Naoroji) of India, a 
country as vast as the ocean. The few Indians here, illiterate 
traders, hawkers and labourers, cannot, will not, bear this insult. 
To obliterate it, to uphold their religion, be it Hinduism or 
Islam or Zoroastrianism (for every religion teaches us that 
failure to honour a pledge taken is a violation of one’s religion), 
2,580 persons out of a total Indian population of 13,000 in the 
Transvaal have already suffered imprisonment. Even now many 
of them are in gaol, and many will go to gaol in future. I must 
say that the gaol here is a terrible place. We do not get there the 
food that we are used to, and are classified with the Kaffirs. 
Many strong-minded Indian women, the so-called weaker sex, 
bear separation from their husbands in order that the latter may 
carry on the fight. Some of them, along with their children, go 
starving. Many of those who suffer thus are Gujaratis, for 
Hindus and Muslims from Gujarat are in a majority [among the 
Indians] in this land.[CWMG, Vol.10, p.158] 


[10 March, 1911 

“If the Regulations provide for Kaffir Police, we can fight the 
Regulations. ” | 

Letter to H. S. L. Polak 

My dear Polak, 

I do not think that there need be any worry about police officer. 
If the Regulations provide for Kaffir Police, we can fight the 
Regulations. Even in attacking the details of the Bill, I think we 
should be very careful not to trouble ourselves with what may 
be remedied by Regulation. Yes, your reading of the second 
Section is, in my opinion, correct, but Gregorowski thinks that 


Siby K. Joseph 97 


the seventh Section overrides that construction, and he may be 
right. You are quite right, the Transvaal right cannot be taken 
away because of registration, but the Natal right of domicile—a 
highly legal term—may be annulled by transference. But I quite 
agree with you that it is not a question to be raised just now. 
Your letter to the Natal Witness I consider magnificent. I do not 
think the Government of India ever gave thought to the many 
things you mention in your letter, but it is intrinsically so good 
and convincing that it should be reproduced in the columns of 
Indian Opinion. I, therefore, return it to you, in case you have 
not a copy.[CWMG. Vol. XI, p. 266] 


[25 October, 1913 

“T saw it reported that we might even ask the Kaffirs to strike. 
But such is not our intention at all.” | 

Interview to “The Natal Mercury” 

The idea behind this proposed movement from the mines was 
that it was not a proper thing to draw rations from the mine- 
owners, and yet not to work. I personally felt that the strike was 
weak so long as the men did not actually leave the mines. What 
will happen now will depend on the result of the conference, 
and that I am unable to foreshadow. The strike, however, will 
continue. According to my estimate there are nearly 3,000 on 
strike. The effect of this is not entirely to stop work as they 
have a certain amount of Kaffir labour, and with this Kaffir 
labour and the Europeans they are able to do some work, 
though the bulk of it is certainly at a standstill. 

I saw it reported that we might even ask the Kaffirs to strike. 
But such is not our intention at all. We do not believe in such 
methods. We have nothing against the employers as such, but 
as the employers are supposed—at least some of them—to have 
opposed the repeal of this tax, this demonstration has become 
necessary. As soon as the Government make a promise to the 


98 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


effect that the tax will be repealed during the next session of 
Parliament, the strikers will be advised to resume work. 

It is not the intention to ask them to join the general struggle at 
all; because, apart from the £3 tax, there are other grievances 
also for which the passive resistance by the general body of the 
people will continue. The other grievances are the marriage 
question; the question of domiciliary rights; the harsh 
administration of existing laws, as the Gold Law in the 
Transvaal; the right of S[outh] A[frica] born Indians to enter 
the Cape by reason of their birth; and the theoretical question of 
the social bar. For these things, even if the promise to repeal the 
£3 tax is given, passive resistance, without the strike, will 
continue. 

I may state also, that no intimidation of any sort was used 
against non-strikers, and the strike is absolutely a voluntary act, 
and in so far as I have been able to see, quite spontaneous. The 
men only needed the position to be placed before them to 
strike.[ CWMG , Vol. XIII, p. 385] 


The citations presented in Obadele Kambon’s article 
may create doubts in the minds of ordinary readers who are 
not familiar with the life and work of Gandhi in South Africa. 
It is a fact that without the relevant text, the context is not at all 
clear to the first time readers of Gandhiana. Therefore, along 
with Obadele Kambon’s citations of Gandhi, entire quote of 
Gandhi with the relevant text is given in the above paragraphs 
to understand Gandhi’s mind properly. 


The primary aim of giving the relevant text of his 
citations is not to tell that Gandhi was perfect, error-free or a 
Mahatma. As in the case of other citations discussed in an 


Siby K. Joseph 99 


earlier chapter, author would like to suggest that a historical 
person should be evaluated from the viewpoints and practices 
of his time, not those of our time. In addition, an ever evolving 
person like Gandhi should be assessed on the basis of the 
totality of his positions on race, caste, equality and liberty when 
they took firm shape. 


Notes and References 


1. https://theprint.in/opinion/ramachandra-guha-is-wrong-a- 
middle-aged-gandhi-was-racist-and-no-mahatma/168222/ 


2. The date mentioned by the author is incorrect. The correct 
date is 17 November, 1906. 


3. This statement is made by L. W. Ritch and not of Gandhi. 
4. This statement is made by L. W. Ritch and not of Gandhi. 


5. The statement is from a letter received by Gandhi from 
Mahomed Khan at Johannesburg 


Chapter-6 
Conclusion 


The centenary celebrations of Gandhi’s return from 
South Africa provided an opportunity to revisit Gandhi’s life 
and work in South Africa and shed more light on certain 
activities which were hitherto not analysed in detail. It also 
brought into surface the controversies or misconceptions about 
his very approach to race and the racial discrimination. In other 
words, it not only resulted in producing literature highlighting 
Gandhi’s contributions in South African soil but also brought 
into limelight the criticisms about his very handling of the 
issues of Indians there and his approach to natives of South 
Africa. It got further visibility with the installation of Gandhi 
statue in Ghana in 2016 and its removal and relocation in 
another place in the background of him being portrayed as a 
racist. It was further fuelled by the attempt of the Indian 
government to install a bust of Gandhi in connection with 
sesquicentennial birth anniversary celebrations of Gandhi in 
Malawi. The introductory part of this work provides a bird’s 
eye view of discussions and debates on this issue. 


In the second chapter a brief review of Gandhi’s life and 
work in South Africa is attempted mainly to understand 
Gandhi’s mind and actual practice in respect of matters relating 
to caste, race and racial discrimination. Though the controversy 
relating to racial discrimination is mainly centered on his life in 
South Africa, his early life is also analysed briefly to see 
whether he was consistent in his approach towards these 
matters or drastically changed it in the course of his life. From 


Siby K. Joseph 101 


the analysis, it can be easily inferred from his early life in India 
and England that he was not affected by caste or racial 
prejudices and to a great extent transcended them. 


In South Africa, Gandhi was a victim of racial 
discrimination both in personal as well as societal terms. 
Gandhi had to face a lot of challenges in his work in South 
Africa while fighting for the cause of people of Indian origin. 
He was living in an alien land unfamiliar with political 
strategies and had to work with severe legal limitations, limited 
resources and social support base. Those who accuse him of 
being soft on the African Whites in respect of their policy 
towards Blacks often forget some of his limitations and the 
inhospitable and hostile environment he had to work in. He was 
an inexperienced young lawyer when he just landed in South 
African soil. 


It would not be fair to describe him as a racist even at 
the beginning of his work in South Africa. He came to South 
Africa in 1893 to assist in a legal suit of Dada Abdullah and 
Company. After completing a year of service he was forced to 
stay in South Africa because of the force of circumstances and 
established Natal Indian Congress in August 1894 to spearhead 
the cause of people of Indian origin there. But from his writings 
from as early as October 1894, it is clear that he was very 
much unhappy with the British policy of denying voting rights 
on the basis of the colour of the skin whether it was for the 
Indians or the natives. He has not minced the words when he 
said “You, in your wisdom, would not allow the Indian or the 
Native the precious privilege under any circumstances, because 
they have a dark skin.” He reminded them that racial 


102 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


discrimination is very much against the Lord’s teachings in 
their holy scripture the Bible. Thus the argument that in the 
initial stages of his life in South Africa he was an ardent racist 
doesn’t seem valid if we analyse his life objectively. 


His life in South Africa was a period of intense 
transformation in terms of evolution of his personality and the 
world of ideas. To some extent he was influenced by major 
developments in the world and in certain cases he went far 
ahead of his time. At the personal level, he took vow of 
Bramacharya and undertook experiments in community living 
through Phoenix settlement and Tolstoy Farm. At the societal 
level, he evolved a strategy expressed in the form of 
satyagraha which turned out to be quite effective in meeting 
the challenge of racial discrimination and getting some relief 
and respite for the people of Indian origin in South Africa in his 
fight for human dignity. 


Gandhi’s general reading and John Finot’s classic work 
Race Prejudice helped him to understand and broaden his ideas 
and approach to racial issues. He was revolutionary in his 
approach because he even talked about the commingling of all 
races. No Indian in 1908 probably thought of such an idea, let 
alone spoke about it. 


In the third chapter, through the analysis of major 
criticisms against Gandhi in South Africa the study tries to 
remove the apprehensions from the minds of the readers about 
some important issues like his support for the Aryan bloodline 
theory to show that the Whites and Indians were from the same 
lineage and the natives had no place in the whole discourse, his 


Siby K. Joseph 103 


use of the term kaffir to describe the natives, his lack of 
concern for their issues, his failure to solve the problems of 
Indians and his outright loyalty to the British. 


The fourth chapter analyses the citations which were 
quoted in the wake of installation of Gandhi statue in Ghana 
and the effort of Indian government to install a Gandhi bust in 
Malawi to show the reductionist approach of persons who 
interpret the comments or text out of context with no 
consideration for the then prevailing circumstances and 
judge them by applying the present standards. 


In the fifth chapter, the citations of Gandhi presented in 
an article along with the whole text are given in order to help 
the readers understand the relevant context. Further, it has to 
be noticed that some of the comments made by Gandhi about 
the blacks of South Africa are from his experiences at jails 
where once he was thrown out of the lavatory and narrowly 
escaped with his life. 


From the analysis of his tumultuous and eventful life in 
South Africa it is clear that Gandhi continued to evolve and 
grow throughout this period while retaining his basic 
formulations and ideas. Thus one can see consistency, 
evolution and growth in the entire process of his life and work 
in South Africa and later in India. This in itself is a great 
achievement by any standard of human endeavour. Another 
aspect which strikes any scholar of Gandhian thought is that 
unlike many others he did not always go out of his way to 
defend his earlier held ideas and actions. At times, he has the 
courage of conviction to say that he has committed Himalayan 


104 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


blunders. Only in this light, his fight against any attack on 
human dignity whether on the count of caste, colour or creed 
could be viewed and assessed. In a nutshell, the present study 
has gone a long way to show that he was neither a racist nor a 
casteist so far as his record of work in South Africa is 
concerned. 


APPENDIX -I 


M. K. Gandhi’s written Statement in the 
Great Trial of 1922 


I owe it perhaps to the Indian public and to the public in 
England, to placate which this prosecution is mainly taken up, 
that I should explain why from a staunch loyalist and co- 
operator, I have become an uncompromising disaffectionist and 
non-co-operator. To the court too I should say why I plead 
guilty to the charge of promoting disaffection towards the 
Government established by law in India. 


My public life began in 1893 in South Africa in troubled 
weather. My first contact with British authority in that country 
was not of a happy character. I discovered that as a man and an 
Indian, I had no rights. More correctly I discovered that I had 
no rights as a man because I was an Indian. 


But I was not baffled. I thought that this treatment of Indians 
was an excrescence upon a system that was intrinsically and 
mainly good. I gave the Government my voluntary and hearty 
co-operation, criticizing it freely where I felt it was faulty but 
never wishing its destruction. 


Consequently when the existence of the Empire was threatened 
in 1899 by the Boer challenge, I offered my services to it, 
raised a volunteer ambulance corps and served at several 
actions that took place for the relief of Ladysmith. Similarly in 
1906, at the time of the Zulu ‘revolt’, I raised a stretcher bearer 
party and served till the end of the ‘rebellion’. On both the 
occasions I received medals and was even mentioned in 
dispatches. For my work in South Africa I was given by Lord 


106 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


Hardinge a Kaisar-i-Hind gold medal. When the war broke out 
in 1914 between England and Germany, I raised a volunteer 
ambulance corps in London, consisting of the then resident 
Indians in London, chiefly students. Its work was 
acknowledged by the authorities to be valuable. Lastly, in India 
when a special appeal was made at the war Conference in Delhi 
in 1918 by Lord Chelmsford for recruits, I struggled at the cost 
of my health to raise a corps in Kheda, and the response was 
being made when the hostilities ceased and orders were 
received that no more recruits were wanted. In all these efforts 
at service, I was actuated by the belief that it was possible by 
such services to gain a status of full equality in the Empire for 
my countrymen. 


The first shock came in the shape of the Rowlatt Act-a law 
designed to rob the people of all real freedom. I felt called upon 
to lead an intensive agitation against it. Then followed the 
Punjab horrors beginning with the massacre at Jallianwala 
Bagh and culminating in crawling orders, public flogging and 
other indescribable humiliations. I discovered too that the 
plighted word of the Prime Minister to the Mussalmans of India 
regarding the integrity of Turkey and the holy places of Islam 
was not likely to be fulfilled. But in spite of the forebodings 
and the grave warnings of friends, at the Amritsar Congress in 
1919, I fought for co-operation and working of the Montagu- 
Chemlmsford reforms, hoping that the Prime Minister would 
redeem his promise to the Indian Mussalmans, that the Punjab 
wound would be healed, and that the reforms, inadequate and 
unsatisfactory though they were, marked a new era of hope in 
the life of India. 


But all that hope was shattered. The Khilafat promise was not 
to be redeemed. The Punjab crime was whitewashed and most 
culprits went not only unpunished but remained in service, and 


Siby K. Joseph 107 


some continued to draw pensions from the Indian revenue and 
in some cases were even rewarded. I saw too that not only did 
the reforms not mark a change of heart, but they were only a 
method of further draining India of her wealth and of 
prolonging her servitude. 


I came reluctantly to the conclusion that the British connection 
had made India more helpless than she ever was before, 
politically and economically. A disarmed India has no power of 
resistance against any aggressor if she wanted to engage, in an 
armed conflict with him. So much is this the case that some of 
our best men consider that India must take generations, before 
she can achieve Dominion Status. She has become so poor that 
she has little power of resisting famines. Before the British 
advent India spun and wove in her millions of cottages, just the 
supplement she needed for adding to her meager agricultural 
resources. This cottage industry, so vital for India’s existence, 
has been ruined by incredibly heartless and inhuman processes 
as described by English witness. Little do town dwellers know 
how the semi-starved masses of India are slowly sinking to 
lifelessness. Little do they know that their miserable comfort 
represents the brokerage they get for their work they do for the 
foreign exploiter, that the profits and the brokerage are sucked 
from the masses. Little do they realize that the Government 
established by law in British India is carried on for this 
exploitation of the masses. No sophistry, no jugglery in figures, 
can explain away the evidence that the skeletons in many 
villages present to the naked eye. I have no doubt whatsoever 
that both England and the town dweller of India will have to 
answer, if there is a God above, for this crime against 
humanity, which is perhaps unequalled in history. The law 
itself in this country has been used to serve the foreign 
exploiter. My unbiased examination of the Punjab Marital Law 
cases has led me to believe that at least ninety-five per cent of 


108 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


convictions were wholly bad. My experience of political cases 
in India leads me to the conclusion, in nine out of every ten, the 
condemned men were totally innocent. Their crime consisted in 
the love of their country. In ninety-nine cases out of hundred, 
justice has been denied to Indians as against Europeans in the 
courts of India. This is not an exaggerated picture. It is the 
experience of almost every Indian who has had anything to do 
with such cases. In my opinion, the administration of the law is 
thus prostituted, consciously or unconsciously, for the benefit 
of the exploiter. 


The greater misfortune is that the Englishmen and their Indian 
associates in the administration of the country do not know that 
they are engaged in the crime I have attempted to describe. I 
am satisfied that many Englishmen and Indian officials 
honestly believing systems devised in the world, and that India 
is making steady, though, slow progress. They do not know, a 
subtle but effective system of terrorism and an organized 
display of force on the one hand, and the deprivation of all 
powers of retaliation or self-defence on the other, has 
emasculated the people and induced in them the habit of 
simulation. This awful habit has added to the ignorance and the 
self-deception of the administrators. Section 124 A, under 
which I am happily charged, is perhaps the prince among the 
political sections of the Indian Penal Code designed to suppress 
the liberty of the citizen. Affection cannot be manufactured or 
regulated by law. If one has no affection for a person or system, 
one should be free to give the fullest expression to his 
disaffection, so long as he does not contemplate, promote, or 
incite to violence. But the section under which mere promotion 
of disaffection is a crime. I have studied some of the cases tried 
under it; I know that some of the most loved of India’s patriots 
have been convicted under it. I consider it a privilege, 
therefore, to be charged under that section. I have endeavored 


Siby K. Joseph 109 


to give in their briefest outline the reasons for my disaffection. I 
have no personal ill-will against any single administrator, much 
less can I have any disaffection towards the King’s person. But 
I hold it to be a virtue to be disaffected towards a Government 
which in its totality has done more harm to India than any 
previous system. India is less manly under the British rule than 
she ever was before. Holding such a belief, I consider it to be a 
sin to have affection for the system. And it has been a precious 
privilege for me to be able to write what I have in the various 
articles tendered in evidence against me. 


In fact, I believe that I have rendered a service to India and 
England by showing in non-co-operation the way out of the 
unnatural state in which both are living. In my opinion, non-co- 
operation with evil is as much a duty as is co-operation with 
good. But in the past, non-co-operation has been deliberately 
expressed in violence to the evil-doer. I am endeavoring to 
show to my countrymen that violent non-co-operation only 
multiples evil, and that as evil can only be sustained by 
violence, withdrawal of support of evil requires complete 
abstention from violence. Non-violence implies voluntary 
submission to the penalty for non-co-operation with evil. I am 
here, therefore, to invite and submit cheerfully to the highest 
penalty that can be inflicted upon me for what in law is 
deliberate crime, and what appears to me to be the highest duty 
of a citizen. The only course open to you, the Judge and the 
assessors, is either to resign your posts and thus dissociate 
yourselves from evil, if you feel that the law you are called 
upon to administer is an evil, and that in reality I am innocent, 
or to inflict on me the severest penalty, if you believe that the 
system and the law you are assisting to administer are good for 
the people of this country, and that my activity is, therefore, 
injurious to the common weal. 


110 Gandhi in South Africa: A Racist... 


SIBY KOLLAPPALLIL JOSEPH 


Siby K. Joseph is Dean of Studies and Research, Institute of 
Gandhian Studies, Wardha. He holds a master’s degree in 
Gandhian Thought and Peace Science and Ph.D. in Gandhian 
Thought and Development Studies from Mahatma Gandhi 
University, Kottayam. He had undergone the International 
course on Peoples’ Diplomacy, Non-Violence, Humane 
Governance and Global Solidarity in Italy, organized by the 
International University of People’s Institution for Peace, 
Rovereto, the Peace Bell Foundation, Rovereto and the 
University of Trento, Italy. He also participated in South Asia 
Level Training Programme on Peace, Reconciliation and 
Conflict Management in Colombo, Sri Lanka and took part in 
the Peace Mission in the conflict affected areas. He has been a 
member of the teaching faculty of the Institute of Gandhian 
Studies, Wardha since 1998. He served as a visiting faculty of 
several reputed academic institutions including the University 
of Terre-du-ciel, Bruailles France and Peace Research Centre, 
Gujarat Vidyapith, Ahmedabad. He participated in a number of 
conferences, workshops and symposiums and delivered a 
numbers of lectures on Gandhian themes. He has published a 
number of articles in reputed journals in various disciplines. He 
edited a number of books and has published several 
monographs and articles on Gandhian Thought and Peace 
Studies. His books were published by Routledge, Concept, 
Manohar and many other publishing houses. Three of his recent 
writings were published by Gandhi International, France. His 
homepage is http://siby.iecit.in E-mail: skjigs @ gmail.com 


INSTITUTE OF GANDHIAN STUDIES 


The Institute of Gandhian Studies (Gandhi Vichar 
Parishad) is an educational and public charitable institution that 
has been set-up as one of the commemorative projects of the 
Jamnalal Bajaj Centenary Year. It was established at Wardha in 
October 7, 1987. The object of the Institute is to promote, 
organize, sponsor, undertake the study of the life and thought 
of Mahatma Gandhi as well as the predecessors of Gandhi and 
contemporary thinkers and social revolutionaries who have 
drawn inspiration from Gandhi, or arrived at similar views as a 
result of their own experience and reflections, as also, to 
undertake comparative studies of the philosophy and 
methodology of Gandhiji and other thinkers and social 
revolutionaries. It offers courses of study of different durations 
oriented towards the academic community including the 
Departments of Gandhian Studies in universities, thinkers, 
religious groups, activists, trade unionists, panchayat leaders, 
workers among unorganized labour, workers of voluntary/grass 
root organisations, women, youth, students and similar other 
groups. 


Institute of Gandhian Studies 
Gopuri, Wardha — 442 001, Maharashtra 
Tel: 0091 (0)7152-243585, 240315 
Fax : 0091(0)7152-240315 
E-mail: igsgvp@gmail.com / igsgvp@yahoo.com 
Website: www.gvpwardha.in 


. enlightening, fair-minded manuscript. Your 
book demonstrates that great leaders are not 
born that way but instead develop their 
extraordinary leadership qualities by 
confronting extraordinary challenges during 
unique moments of historical transformation. 


- Clayborne Carson 

Martin Luther King, Jr., Centennial Professor of History, 
Ronnie Lott Founding Director, The Martin Luther King, Jr., 
Research and Education Institute, 


Kasturba and Mahatma Gandhi ; $ : : 
Sesquicentennial Publication Stanford University, California 


This is a timely book that puts to rest the allegation made time and again that 
Gandhi was a racist. Siby K Joseph has meticulously contextualised each of 
the statements advanced by the detractors of Gandhi to demonstrate the 
lopsidedness with which they presented their claims. He has also come up 
with relevant quotes to make the issue more nuanced than straightforward. 

- John S. Moolakkattu 


Professor, Department of International Relations & Politics, Central University of Kerala 
Editor, Gandhi Marg, New Delhi; Gandhi-Luthuli Chair Professor in Peace Studies (2008-2010) 
University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa 


We live in an age when reputations can rise and fall in a nanosecond, when 
even such titans as Gandhi can be tarnished by innuendo, or by blindly 
focusing on perceived flaws and errors and thus missing the totality of the 
person. | salute Siby K Joseph and his meticulous work which solidly opposes 
such tendencies and sets the record straight. 


- Gabriel Rosenstock 
lrish Poet and author of Walk with Gandhi: Bothar na Saoirse, 
Dublin, Ireland 


Siby K. Joseph is Dean of Studies and Research, Institute of Gandhian Studies, Wardha. He has a 
master’s degree in Gandhian Thought and Peace Science and Ph.D. in Gandhian Thought and 


Development Studies from Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam. He has edited a number of 
books and has published several monographs and articles on Gandhian Thought and Peace 
Studies. His books were published by Routledge, Concept, Manohar and many other publication 
hiar; houses. Three of his recent writings were published by Gandhi International, France. 

l y | His homepage is http://siby.iecit.in 


ISBN : 9788193291542 


Institute of Gandhian Studies 
Gopuri, Wardha - 442 001 (MS) INDIA Til 
www.gvpwardha.in 


788193 ` 291542